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Net2Infinity
August 4th, 2006, 05:03 AM
Anybody have any experience with total drive encryption? I am currently using Truecrypt to encrypt one partition on my laptop, but am looking to migrate to a total disk encryption solution. As a network engineer I have copies of router configs and network diagrams and such. I am serious considering forking over the 200 dollars for PGP's offering, but I figured I would ask for opinions first.
SirDice
August 4th, 2006, 12:16 PM
Have a look at SafeBoot (http://www.safeboot.com/)..
vlad warghoul
August 4th, 2006, 10:14 PM
Is this going to be just for you or are you looking for an enterprise solution? If enterprise is on the horizon look into entrust..
http://www.entrust.com/data-protection/index.htm
You can also get the single suite protection from them as well.
redemption
August 5th, 2006, 12:46 PM
I use DriveCrypt PlusPack from SecurStar
http://www.securstar.com/products_drivecryptpp.php
Black Cluster
August 5th, 2006, 07:11 PM
http://www.truecrypt.org/ .... is great ....
The3ntropy
August 5th, 2006, 07:27 PM
I have significant first hand experience with "PGP Desktop Professional 9.0 with Whole Disk Encryption" and can recommend it if WDE is necessary. The driver it uses for hdd access with WDE works well enough to be acceptible in a workstaiton environment. If being used on a laptop, I would recommend at least a 2Ghz dothan or 1.6Ghz yonah core for transparent access; if you have less, you may notice a slight performance hit with disk access intensive applications and slightly longer boot up times.
However, overall, PGP WDE has worked very well in all of my experiences with it, and I do recommend it for you based upon the information you have provided.
Net2Infinity
August 5th, 2006, 09:17 PM
Thank you for the valuable input. After considering Safeboot and the PGP solutions, I elected to go with the PGP solution and bought the eToken to go along with it. Thanks for the suggestions and I will let you know how it works out.
Moira
October 28th, 2006, 06:59 PM
I've always been a fan of PGP, I find it does an excellent job without causing any problems. If I needed total encryption I'd be more than happy to pay for PGP. At the moment I use PGP Desktop version 9 with the free options which are more than adequate for my needs.
Version 8 had an vulnerability with insecure padding (in the free program anyway) but I think most people would be using a later version now.