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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Personal Whole Disk Encryption

Posted on 12:59 PM by Unknown

So about two or three weeks ago I decided to bite the bullet and install a whole-disk-encryption solution to my personal laptop.

We use whole disk encryption (WDE) at work on all our systems for security and data-loss prevention so the whole concept is well covered here and I’ve done a number of posts on PGP WDE in particular, when combined with WinPE solutions.

But PGP is a commercial solution, and like some other commercial WDE products, is pretty costly and not a practical solution for most home users.

The whole concept of whole disk encryption is that even if someone physically steals your computer/laptop/portable-drive, they cannot access the data in a readable format without the use of an encryption key. In many ways, I think this is one of the very last bastions of standard computing security practice that hasn’t made it down to the average consumer level…and sadly…many companies and small businesses.  I always shudder when I see computers in small mom-and-pop businesses sitting out in the open near windows and wonder if their customer data is really safe at rest on them.

Anyway, it was time to lock-down the Valca laptops.

There were a small number of free/$$ consumer products out there for whole disk encryption I could have gone with. The two major factors I was particularly concerned with were 1) would system/disk performance be negatively impacted and 2) would recovery options to off-line mount the encrypted disk be available for me to use under a WinPE platform?

Advances in standard desktop hardware performance pretty much rendered the first one not a concern, and I have been using the portable version of TrueCrypt off USB drives and in WinPE for quite a while.

In the end I went with TrueCrypt and haven’t been disappointed.

The whole process is very easy to go through and I’ve seen absolutely no performance issues. In fact, I did all my recent HD video editing exercise with nary a performance blip shortly after my system was running the TrueCrypt whole disk encryption.

  • TrueCrypt - System Encryption
  • TrueCrypt - FAQ (answers to frequently asked questions)
  • Step-by-step guide to installing TrueCrypt and encrypting Windows XP system partition - Security Beacon

You might want to consider some of the points that Michael Pietroforte raised last week over at 4SysOps

  • Is TrueCrypt trustworthy? - 4sysops. I think he does make some valid points, but regardless, my primary concern is data loss prevention from robbery/burglary/my-own-stupidity and not from possible back-door exploits from shadowy gobernment data-collection operations run against the citizenry. Anyway, I thought Michael provided a great and often unconsidered perspective.

Alternative whole disk encryption solutions worth considering for home users

CE-Infosys - Free CompuSec PC Security Suite - I first stumbled across this German based software solution back when I was seeing how WDE might protect against KON-BOOT. It is completely free for both personal and professional use.

DiskCryptor - Open Source disk partition encryption program. I am not as familiar with this program but it has been kicking around now for a very long time. In addition it also supports Windows LiveCD integration.

Microsoft BitLocker/TPM - Note you need to be running Windows 7 Enterprise or Ultimate (or other Vista/Win 8 supported editions). Windows 7/8 Home editions don’t support it. A system board with TPM chip is not required, but recommended.

  • Help protect your files using BitLocker Drive Encryption - Windows.
  • BitLocker Drive Encryption Overview - Microsoft TechNet
  • What is BitLocker? What does it do? What does it not do? - US SMB&D TS2 Team Blog

For commercial products, this article may be helpful:

Buyer's Guide to Full Disk Encryption - eSecurity Planet

Cheers and stay secure,

Claus Valca

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