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Date:      Tue, 26 Feb 2008 12:51:38 +0100
From:      Achim Patzner <ap@bnc.net>
To:        Uwe Doering <gemini@geminix.org>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Security Flaw in Popular Disk Encryption Technologies
Message-ID:  <F35C7564-B5DB-43D0-B783-A254CFB00D01@bnc.net>
In-Reply-To: <47C3FBE8.8010201@geminix.org>
References:  <20080223010856.7244.qmail@smasher.org>	<20080223222733.GI12067@redundancy.redundancy.org> <31648FC5-26B9-4359-ACC8-412504D3257B@bnc.net> <47C345C9.8010901@geminix.org> <9111966B-DB9C-41E3-9D30-168D668585A9@bnc.net> <47C3FBE8.8010201@geminix.org>

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Am 26.02.2008 um 12:45 schrieb Uwe Doering:
>> You might want to take a look at eNova (http://www.enovatech.net/)
>> who are pointing at interesting hardware using their crypto  
>> technology.
>
> Interesting approach as well.  Thanks for the pointer.  However,  
> given that notebooks are the most vulnerable group of computers in  
> this regard, the drawback I see is that the notebook manufacturers  
> first have to adopt this solution, since you normally cannot put  
> such additional hardware into a notebook yourself.

I put a few of these into MSI S262 systems. But I really love my
Dremel... You might consider buying barebone systems which provide an
USB connector you can remove in some way.


Achim Patzner



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