Security software?
Mar. 29th, 2008 08:52 pmWhile I was at Orbital over the weekend I managed to lose my USB memory stick - fortunately it's been found, and should be back with me in a few days, but it prompted me to think about security issues. This time there aren't any serious problems, but in the future there might.
Basically, I want to give at least part of the drive some sort of password-only access; the snag is that it needs to be something that will work with Windows XP and Mac OS-X, and possibly Linux if I end up going that route. The software that came with the drive works for XP only, which isn't much help.
I don't need it to be totally uncrackable - I'm not worried about business rivals or spies reading the drive, more about e.g. someone seeing a draft letter that mentions them, or something of that sort.
Is there any simple way of doing this?
Basically, I want to give at least part of the drive some sort of password-only access; the snag is that it needs to be something that will work with Windows XP and Mac OS-X, and possibly Linux if I end up going that route. The software that came with the drive works for XP only, which isn't much help.
I don't need it to be totally uncrackable - I'm not worried about business rivals or spies reading the drive, more about e.g. someone seeing a draft letter that mentions them, or something of that sort.
Is there any simple way of doing this?
no subject
Date: 2008-03-29 10:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-29 11:37 pm (UTC)I've used it on Windows & Linux, and there's a Mac OS X version too. You can supposedly create a Truecrypt container on a USB flash key. It's one of those things I keep meaning to do but never get around to. The downside of using it as a portable application (as opposed to using it on one of your own machines) is that you need administrator privileges to use it on a Windows box. It also might be an over the top solution, it's really meant to be a disk encryption system. You might be better off using a simple command line file encryption utility such as ccrypt (http://ccrypt.sourceforge.net/) that'll run on just about anything I think.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-30 01:32 am (UTC)