DomAviator
Posts: 1253
Joined: 4/22/2008 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: farglebargle The first rule of deniable encryption is don't talk about deniable encryption. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MaruTukku ) The second rule of deniable encryption is REALLY DON'T TALK ABOUT DENIABLE ENCRYPTION! I can see the evolution of business habits. When you go overseas, you *will* need to reconnect to the company VPN and mirror all your important things in the lounge at LHR before coming back, so if you're randomly selected, you have copies on the server. I can not emphasise strongly enough that you NOT encrypt your data. There is no such thing as encryption that the DOD or NSA cannot break and if you are running an abnormal encryption you will "look guilty" and will bring on further scrutiny. Once they break the encryption even a simple e-mail like: "Hey Kevers can we go to Galveston for the weekend cause I feel like Joe's Crab Shack. Ill bring my leopard teddy and the his and hers KY." will be read as: "Project Leopard is a GO. Break. Target Galveston Cruise Ship Terminal. Break. Binary agent secured and ready for use. Break. Commence operation this weekend break. Authenticate CRAB, I say again CRAB End Message." You know, if you are buying parmasean cheese at the store, bring it home in the bottle because if you take it out, put it in a condom, and rathole it up your ass you are going to "look guilty" even if it is parmesan cheese LOL. If someone, be it federal agent or simple thief got ahold of my laptop they will find nothing but a dual boot hard drive - Windows XP and Linux Fedora. (I trashed Vista as soon as I bought it) Microsloth Office XP, AutoCAD Light., Adobe Acrobat, Paint Shop Pro, and some other entirely innocuous software like the DVD player etc... I have NO business files on it, no business correspondence, nothing but personal stuff - like my Ebay bids and correspondence with friends. All of my business files are on the intranet for my business web sites. (Joomla is a marvelous thing with some great Intranet components!) I am not afraid of the Govt "finding out what I'm up to" as I have nothing to hide. However, I am concerned about a competitor giving some street kid $1000 to grab my notebook in the hopes of finding out exactly what I bid for that crew lease job, or what my hourly contract rate for 737 sim time is, or exactly what is going to be in the new release of our computer based part 135 recurrency program etc.... This is nothing to worry about, if you maintain proper operational security. Search my lap top and you will find nothing of any consequence. Steal my laptop, or send it to Gnome with my luggage when I went to Denver and I will lose nothing. I will go to the nearest Walmart, buy a new one, log into my own web site, hit the password protected intranet and be right back in business. I dont even have potentially compromising stuff bookmarked... I know that my online banking for Washington Mutual is wamu.com and that my Wells Fargo is wellsfargo.com. Hell thats part of how I managed to financially prosper while married to a compulsive spender - she didn't even know about half the bank accounts I had because the ones she didnt need to know about had the statements go to a dead mans drop at a virtual office. I made it a point to learn what is known as "trade craft" and it pays off handsomely both in business and if you ever get divorced. Encyrpting stuff just says "dig deeper"... The key is to dont leave behind trails that will haunt you. Dont try to bring an encrypted camera card of your wild weekend in Paris home, e-mail the fucking pictures to one of your e-mail accounts before you leave and then delete them. Either that or ante up $10 to buy a domain name at GoDaddy, put up a "Hi this is my home page I am working on it and will have info soon" page in the free hosting and then set up a password protected directory with an .htcaccess and .htpassword file and FTP your shit in there... Jeez....
< Message edited by DomAviator -- 6/28/2008 11:27:59 AM >
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