Encryption
TrueCrypt review
By Frank Ohlhorst | Computerworld US | Published: 16:28, 10 February 2010
Applications
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It's not easy being WinZip these days. Windows has been able to open and create Zip files on its own for a while now, and free, powerful compression utilities like 7-Zip are readily available and actively maintained. And yet, the 20 year-old utility soldiers on with version 17, delivering impressive utility and showing a keen awareness of the rapidly evolving cloud storage and file sharing landscape. New integration with cloud storage services and social networks gives WinZip a firm foothold in the online world. It's available in $50 Pro and $30 Standard versions, each with a twenty-one-day free trial.
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Remembering all of your passwords may not seem difficult...until you think about just how many passwords you have.
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Security
Cyberghost VPN Free review
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Worried that websites are snooping on you as you surf? Concerned that when you're at a public Hot Spot, such as at a café, a hacker can intercept everything you send and receive, including passwords and other personal information?
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Security
BestCrypt review
Friday, March 11, 2011
BestCrypt is a file encryption tool that focuses on the creation of encrypted containers. Each container file can be any size from a few megabytes to as large as an entire drive (on an NTFS drive, 4 gigabytes on FAT32).
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Security
FreeOTFE review
Thursday, March 10, 2011
FreeOTFE may sound like a political bumper sticker, but it stands for "Free On The Fly Encryption." The "Free" part is self-explanatory; "On The Fly Encryption" refers to the encrypting/decrypting of data as it is written to or read from your hard disk.
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Comments
Michael Young said: The law is split among Federal Court districts right now and has not yet reached the level of the Supreme Court So literally refusal to decrypt is OK in part of the country and will get you jailed for contempt in other parts of the US
sabrina D said: As its a open source application too but i am not that much satisified with truecrypt
Paulb said: It is a criminal offence to supply encryption technology in the US that the US governmentagencies cannot decrypt If they can do it so can anyone else determined enough to do so These systems are valid only for keeping the wife and kids out of your porncollection They serve no valid business use whatsoever and just give a false senseof security - which is worse than none at all
ed said: For example users worried about forgetting their passkeys can create rescue media that will grant them access to an encrypted volume if needed This is quite incorrect as the rescue disk only works for restoring the header of a damaged volume but you still have to know the correct password its not stored in the rescue disk