I completely agree, someone who doesn't want the police to have access to their entire private life is clearly a child molester.
20 years? As if. If you have to resort to brute forcing a 50 character password, you're basically not going to manage it in a meaningful time frame. Even if you could try billions of passwords per second, it would still take trillions of years to try even a fraction of the possible combinations.
Yes, but your assuming that the attacker knows this and varies their attack accordingly. This isn't often the case.
imagine their anoyance that in a trillion years the crack the password only to find you put all the suspect files in a password protected / encrypted zip file... containing a password protected word file... possibly encrypted stored in an encrypted folder
imagine their anoyance that in a trillion years the crack the password only to find you put all the suspect files in a password protected / encrypted zip file... containing a password protected word file... possibly encrypted stored in an encrypted folder
That won't help. Not even slightly.His only failure was not using hidden partitions.
They'd already have to have provided sufficient proof to get a warrant in order to seize the computer in the first place. No point going through it again.
That won't help. Not even slightly.
agreed, however one of my mates at uni for his dissertation developed a program that you could input a personality or hobbies rarther of that person, their favourite places, football team etc and would then generate random passwords based on this input. Which was pretty cool!
Aye, was planning to come back and post something about this, as I've now read the relevant bits of RIPA.
It's like if they took a locked box from you under a warrant, then asked for the key, except even if you don't give the key they could still break the box open. With a properly encrypted drive it's hard to prove the encrypted data is there at all, hard to prove you know a key and essentially impossible to break in without the key.
The police don't need a warrant to search premises and seize items and belongings, just the authority of an inspector.
All of my passwords are 16 characters, with a mixture of captials and symbols e.g. "IB=3bzma4te%HXZa" which for all intents and purposes is not rememberable. However, buried under a master password in the browser on my mac is the option to log in to each of my bookmarked sites with 1 click.
AeIg((e,+|Kr:!A#=8Z*_)_sHub)pm*'s-qZ/}-d[Z.BazprMM9m*r;hNyn*bky
If they existed the government wouldn't use the exact same encryption algorithm for top secret files.
Remember, it may take a 100billion years to crack with today's technology, but advances in tech are exponential. Quantum computing may even prove to be a deal breaker in this respect.
If you use truecrypt then it's difficult, though not impossible, to even be sure that there is anything there but empty hard disk space. And from there you're into major league forensics to show it's there before you can even begin to worry about decrypting anything.