Cryptography A cartoon intro to DNS over HTTPS – Mozilla Hacks |
- A cartoon intro to DNS over HTTPS – Mozilla Hacks
- AMA with Stewart Baker is on now in r/legaladvice. Mr. Baker is an Attorney, the host of the Cyberlaw Podcast, former General Counsel of the NSA, Assistant Secretary for Policy at DHS, and Author.
- HDD failure while fully encrypted
- Without hardware acceleration is AES256 encryption double as compute intensive as AES128?
A cartoon intro to DNS over HTTPS – Mozilla Hacks Posted: 06 Jun 2018 04:57 AM PDT |
Posted: 06 Jun 2018 08:27 AM PDT Stewart A. Baker is participating in an AMA in r/legaladvice right now to answer your questions related to cybersecurity, internet law, GDPR, cryptography, legal responses to terrorism, international legal issues, and anything else. You can post your questions, and he will begin answering them at 2pm eastern, 11 pacific. Stewart Baker is currently a partner in the law firm of Steptoe & Johnson in Washington, D.C. From 2005 to 2009, he was the first Assistant Secretary for Policy at the Department of Homeland Security. Mr. Baker has been General Counsel of the National Security Agency and General Counsel of the commission that investigated WMD intelligence failures prior to the Iraq war. He is the author of Skating on Stilts, a book on terrorism, cybersecurity, and other technology issues and the the blog of the same name; he also hosts the weekly Cyberlaw Podcast. r/legaladvice is very lucky to have such a distinguished public servant, attorney, and technology expert here to answer questions and we'd like to thank him in advance for taking the time to come here and participate in the AMA. [link] [comments] |
HDD failure while fully encrypted Posted: 06 Jun 2018 04:23 PM PDT If you do FDE with Veracrypt in an HDD and this HDD breaks for some reason, will the data become recoverable, or it's just bricked? I had some old Seagate fully encrypted with Veracrypt which died, im not even sure if it's spinning, seems silent and not recognized by the bios, looks pretty dead to me. It has nothing of value inside but still, im not sure if that state the encryption would become vulnerable somehow. Maybe being able to read some filename of bad sectors or something or its just not possible? This HDD didn't had SMART enabled btw, so I have no idea what the health status was like, I was never able to get SMART enabled in this disk for some reason (it has it, it was just disabled). [link] [comments] |
Without hardware acceleration is AES256 encryption double as compute intensive as AES128? Posted: 06 Jun 2018 08:19 AM PDT I'm running an Intel Atom based NAS (no AES instructions and no AES kernel module) and the throughput on my AES256 containers is bad (limited by CPU power). Would AES128 do better? What would be the security implications? [link] [comments] |
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