Use different user accounts for each user of the computer. Use NTFS and put your documents under your account "My Documents" folder and use the built-in encryption. Once there, only you can access them unless you assign another user to have access or export the recovery key to access them. Ordinary users are not permitted by WinNT, WinXP or Win7 to access the folder tree of other users on the system. Each user has a separate profile and desktop.Yes, you can copy files from the encrypted folder to a non-encrypted folder but you have to have decrypt access to do it, otherwise you get garbage.Once encrypted, and it is VERY strong encryption, you lose the files forever if you lose the key. There is no tool that can recover them in this universe.
Quote from: QwazyWabbit on June 20, 2011, 04:48:09 PMUse different user accounts for each user of the computer. Use NTFS and put your documents under your account "My Documents" folder and use the built-in encryption. Once there, only you can access them unless you assign another user to have access or export the recovery key to access them. Ordinary users are not permitted by WinNT, WinXP or Win7 to access the folder tree of other users on the system. Each user has a separate profile and desktop.Yes, you can copy files from the encrypted folder to a non-encrypted folder but you have to have decrypt access to do it, otherwise you get garbage.Once encrypted, and it is VERY strong encryption, you lose the files forever if you lose the key. There is no tool that can recover them in this universe.I bet the NSA can......or DARPA...or some cloak and dagger group.          Interesting topic.
Quote from: Krlll Mule on June 21, 2011, 01:52:25 PMQuote from: QwazyWabbit on June 20, 2011, 04:48:09 PMUse different user accounts for each user of the computer. Use NTFS and put your documents under your account "My Documents" folder and use the built-in encryption. Once there, only you can access them unless you assign another user to have access or export the recovery key to access them. Ordinary users are not permitted by WinNT, WinXP or Win7 to access the folder tree of other users on the system. Each user has a separate profile and desktop.Yes, you can copy files from the encrypted folder to a non-encrypted folder but you have to have decrypt access to do it, otherwise you get garbage.Once encrypted, and it is VERY strong encryption, you lose the files forever if you lose the key. There is no tool that can recover them in this universe.I bet the NSA can......or DARPA...or some cloak and dagger group.          Interesting topic.dont even need that there is no such thing as secure data...
256 aes? shit thats pretty awesome must be a bitch on processing to open encrypted files if they are accessed often... and AES is no longer secure however... it does take a metric fuck ton of computing power to crack (easily obtained if you have the sources )
Quote from: VaeVictis on June 21, 2011, 06:59:52 PM256 aes? shit thats pretty awesome must be a bitch on processing to open encrypted files if they are accessed often... and AES is no longer secure however... it does take a metric fuck ton of computing power to crack (easily obtained if you have the sources )I don't know what "accessed often" means in this context. You don't encrypt your page file, that's for sure. But a document gets opened, cached in ram, modified, scrolled, saved and only the read/writes are encrypted.Define "no longer secure". I remind you that all attempts to break it have been against a weak version of AES, not the full 12-round AES256.Do you have any real conception of what 2^N complexity means?
Probably a better idea would be to incorporate a BIOS password. Unless someone knows the BIOS password, they won't be able to boot the disk into windows to even have a chance to see whats on it unless they physically remove the hard drive and put it into another machine. And even then, it'll take 500 years for that different machine to install all of the proper drivers in order for that hard disk to work properly with the new machine its plugged into.