August Abolins wrote to All <=-
The EFS exploit sounds a bit worrisome since "the problem" can
be triggered even when EFS is not even in use. I *was*
thinking of trying it a while back though.
The EFS exploit sounds a bit worrisome since "the problem" can
be triggered even when EFS is not even in use. I *was*
thinking of trying it a while back though.
Remember that Windows includes a way to delibrately crash it[1]. That makes me a little concerned. <G>
1 = https://tinyurl.com/ya4cgqld (docs.microsoft.com)
I have to wonder what other keys (hold down key x and tap key y
n times) ..they might have wasted time implementing.
EFS intriqued me. I always thought it would be handy to have at
least one live-encryted folder or something. But it doesn't
sound prudent to play with it now.
You know that Control-Alt-Delete was never meant to be part of the original IBM PC? It "escaped" the lab.
I read an article interviewing the engineer that developed that at IBM.
He said that it was deliberately awkward so it couldn't be performed accidentally.
I'd use VeraCrypt and do the whole hard drive if you go encryption. My opinion, of course, but in my IT career, I found that to be a good solution (there's a Linux filesystem that can do that also).
August Abolins wrote to Sean Dennis <=-
Ctl-Alt-Del doesn't seem awkward to me. For the most part it's
a two-hander, but achieved rather comfortably.
The Thinkpad T60 has HDD password feature, and a fingerprint
scanner. I've been afraid to even try those incase the
internal systems would fail.
August Abolins wrote to All <=-
The EFS exploit sounds a bit worrisome since "the problem" can
be triggered even when EFS is not even in use. I *was*
thinking of trying it a while back though.
Remember that Windows includes a way to delibrately crash it[1]. That makes me a little concerned. <G>
Rob Swindell wrote to Sean Dennis <=-
A handy feature (that's not enabled by default) for driver and kernel developers.
*nix's have similar kernel-mode debug capabilities.
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