Siempte privacy is precious these days, but this only applies when it is online,but also the data we have stored locally. From a crook who steals a laptop tothe technician that Snoop does not have to see pictures of your vacation, or even a brush with the authorities, can become a problem for the user, unless you perform encryption of your data. true Crypt has been released recently, and with good reason: you have defeated the FBI in more than one occasion,and as a free tool that is, becomes the first encryption option for many users.
Surfing the Internet has some element of surprise. In general one tends to follow a common path, jumping from one site to another, absorbing and recording new news. About twenty days ago, I found a story in which a womanfrom Colorado had been ordered by a judge to deliver an unencrypted copy ofyour laptop hard drive in order to facilitate research on the process through which is accused of bank fraud. She disobeyed the judge’s order invoking the protection of the Fifth Amendment, which prevents (among other things) for a person to incriminate himself. The judge argued that the Fifth Amendment did not apply in this case, because they were requesting “a copy unencrypted” the hard drive and not “password” to overcome encryption. But this does not end there.
Blog cocheconconductor.es