Posted on 11/18/2005 7:09:39 PM PST by sionnsar
It's my understanding that laptop hard drives can be password protected and that this is about as secure as commercial encryption gets.
Am I wrong?
I was asking about what is possible. It seems irresponsible not to password protect sensitive data on laptop. My understanding is that laptop drives have a built in protection that is difficult to break, if it is used.
Regular old Windows logon passwords are easy to get around. Windows has an encryption feature that is very hard to crack but I think it only works on files and / or folders and I assume people rarely use it, but it's good. And the best - and what should've been on this laptop - is a third party program than encrypts the entire hard drive and is nearly impossible to crack.
OK, the feature I am speaking of seems to be new.
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1825740,00.asp
I read about a customer in a computer store setting a password that made the drive useless to the store owner.
Seems like any laptop with sensitive information should be encrypted. Windows makes it easy. I assume Linux and MacOS do too.
Yeah that Seagate. That's actually a little more than a program, but that's what I was thinking about.
This same thing happened to SAIC employees this year. Now Boeing. I worked for SAIC and my wife works for Boeing. Both of us have had our social security numbers ripped off at each company. My SS is in the Boeing info and her SS is in the SAIC info.
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