Podcasts about disk encryption

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Best podcasts about disk encryption

Latest podcast episodes about disk encryption

Engineering Kiosk
#161 Sichere Daten trotz physischem Zugriff: Disk Encryption und Integritätsschutz von Laptops bis IoT-Devices mit David Gstir von sigma star

Engineering Kiosk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 68:40


Wie funktioniert eigentlich die Verschlüsselung unserer Daten und Festplatten bzw. Storages?Viele Elemente deines Lebens spielen sich inzwischen digital ab. Deine Daten werden also immer wichtiger und somit auch sensibler. Niemand möchte, dass die eigenen Daten in falsche Hände geraten. Die eigenen Daten zu verschlüsseln ist da ein wichtiges Mittel zum Schutz dieser.Doch, wie funktioniert das ganze eigentlich, wenn man seine Laptop-Festplatte verschlüsselt? Wird jedes File einzeln verschlüsselt oder die Festplatte als Ganzes? Welche Algorithmen kommen da zum Einsatz? Wo wird eigentlich das Passwort bzw. der Verschlüsselungskey abgelegt? Wie kann ich die Integrität der Daten sicherstellen? Was ist eine Trust Zone? Was sind Evil-Maid- und Cold-Boot-Attacken? Und entschlüssel ich die Daten meines Storage-Devices eigentlich, wenn gar keine Tastatur zur Verfügung steht? Wie es z.B. bei IoT-Geräten der Fall ist?Das alles besprechen wir mit unserem Gast David Gstir.Bonus: Nerds in den Bergen.Unsere aktuellen Werbepartner findest du auf https://engineeringkiosk.dev/partnersDas schnelle Feedback zur Episode:

LINUX Unplugged
573: Universal Blue Man Group

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 79:06


Think Silverblue, but with cloud-native tooling used to build it. From Aurora to Bazzite, our impressions of the ambitious Universal Blue project.Sponsored By:Core Contributor Membership: Take $1 a month of your membership for a lifetime!Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices! 1Password Extended Access Management: 1Password Extended Access Management is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps. Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:

LINUX Unplugged
572: Data Security Only a Maniac Could Love

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 91:29


Wes' self-decrypting bcachefs disk and a GrapheneOS twist that'll make you ditch your iPhone.Sponsored By:Core Contributor Membership: Take $1 a month of your membership for a lifetime!Tailscale: Tailscale is a programmable networking software that is private and secure by default - get it free on up to 100 devices! 1Password Extended Access Management: 1Password Extended Access Management is a device trust solution for companies with Okta, and they ensure that if a device isn't trusted and secure, it can't log into your cloud apps. Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:

BSD Now
557: 17h per frame

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 46:52


Open Source Software: The $9 Trillion Resource Companies Take for Granted, Tinkering with Manjaro and NetBSD on the Pinebook Pro: a crumbs-in-the-forest tutorial & review, OpenSMTPD 7.5.0p0 Released, OpenBSD 7.5 locks down with improved disk encryption support and syscall limitations, Book 8088, Custom Prometheus dashboards using Console templates, FreeBSD Foundation March 2024 Partnerships Update, Ray tracing made possible on 42-year-old ZX Spectrum: 'reasonably fast, if you consider 17 hours per frame to be reasonably fast', and more NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines Open Source Software: The $9 Trillion Resource Companies Take for Granted (https://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/open-source-software-the-nine-trillion-resource-companies-take-for-granted) Tinkering with Manjaro and NetBSD on the Pinebook Pro: a crumbs-in-the-forest tutorial & review (https://www.autodidacts.io/pinebook-pro-linux-bsd-laptop-review-tutorial/) News Roundup OpenSMTPD 7.5.0p0 Released (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20240410185045) OpenBSD 7.5 locks down with improved disk encryption support and syscall limitations (https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/12/openbsd_75_disk_encryption/) Book 8088 (https://liliputing.com/version-2-0-of-the-book-8088-retro-mini-laptop-adds-vga-graphics-card-and-serial-ports/) Custom Prometheus dashboards using Console templates (https://tumfatig.net/2024/custom-prometheus-dashboards-using-console-templates/) FreeBSD Foundation March 2024 Partnerships Update (https://freebsdfoundation.org/blog/march-2024-partnerships-update/) Ray tracing made possible on 42-year-old ZX Spectrum: 'reasonably fast, if you consider 17 hours per frame to be reasonably fast' (https://www.pcgamer.com/ray-tracing-made-possible-on-42-year-old-zx-spectrum-reasonably-fast-if-you-consider-17-hours-per-frame-to-be-reasonably-fast/) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) Join us and other BSD Fans in our BSD Now Telegram channel (https://t.me/bsdnow)

LINUX Unplugged
525: Beating Apple to the Sauce

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 72:20


We daily drive Asahi Linux on a MacBook, chat about how the team beat Apple to a major GPU milestone, and an easy way to self-host open-source ChatGPT alternatives. Special Guest: Neal Gompa.

Risky Business
Risky Business #686 -- White House to move on spyware industry

Risky Business

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 58:56


On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news, including: Half of all UK COBRA meetings are ransomware related Ransomware biggest risk to US port security White House to move on spyware industry EU to launch its own Starlink equivalent Much, much more AttackIQ's Jonathan Reiber will be joining us in this week's sponsor interview to talk about how companies and their boards are really moving towards outcomes-based security programs. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Twitter if that's your thing. Show notes Ransomware incidents now make up majority of British government's crisis management COBRA meetings - The Record by Recorded Future DHS Secretary: Cyberattacks are the most significant threat to port infrastructure - The Record by Recorded Future Michigan school districts reopen after three-day closure due to ransomware attack - The Record by Recorded Future Microsoft: Royal ransomware group using Google Ads in campaign - The Record by Recorded Future Researchers Quietly Cracked Zeppelin Ransomware Keys – Krebs on Security Risky Biz News: Cyber Partisans hack and disrupt Kremlin censor US, Estonian authorities arrest two over $575 million cryptocurrency fraud - The Record by Recorded Future New FTX CEO details 'complete failure of corporate controls' at crypto platform OpenSSL Usage in UEFI Firmware Exposes Weakness in SBOMs EU reaches agreement on new satellite constellation - The Record by Recorded Future Ukraine's Engineers Dodged Russian Mines To Get Kherson Back Online–With A Little Help From Elon Musk's Satellites Senate Democrats call on FTC to investigate Twitter's data security 11.17.22 - FTC - Twitter Letter Twitter has a lot of your data. Here's what you can do about it. Mastodon vulnerable to multiple system configuration problems | The Daily Swig System misconfiguration is the number one vulnerability, at least for Mastodon White House expected to issue executive order reining in spyware H20220930-005_Himes-Speier cc's - DocumentCloud A Leak Details Apple's Secret Dirt on Corellium, a Trusted Security Startup | WIRED Risky Biz News: Iranian state hackers breached US government agency and deployed a cryptominer, out of all things India removes ban on VLC media player after cybersecurity concerns addressed - The Record by Recorded Future Amazon addresses vulnerability affecting AWS AppSync - The Record by Recorded Future CVE-2022-41924 - RCE in Tailscale, DNS Rebinding, and You Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations | CISA Impacket and Exfiltration Tool Used to Steal Sensitive Information from Defense Industrial Base Organization | CISA

Risky Business
Risky Business #686 -- White House to move on spyware industry

Risky Business

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022


On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news, including: Half of all UK COBRA meetings are ransomware related Ransomware biggest risk to US port security White House to move on spyware industry EU to launch its own Starlink equivalent Much, much more AttackIQ's Jonathan Reiber will be joining us in this week's sponsor interview to talk about how companies and their boards are really moving towards outcomes-based security programs. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Twitter if that's your thing. Show notes Ransomware incidents now make up majority of British government's crisis management COBRA meetings - The Record by Recorded Future DHS Secretary: Cyberattacks are the most significant threat to port infrastructure - The Record by Recorded Future Michigan school districts reopen after three-day closure due to ransomware attack - The Record by Recorded Future Microsoft: Royal ransomware group using Google Ads in campaign - The Record by Recorded Future Researchers Quietly Cracked Zeppelin Ransomware Keys – Krebs on Security Risky Biz News: Cyber Partisans hack and disrupt Kremlin censor US, Estonian authorities arrest two over $575 million cryptocurrency fraud - The Record by Recorded Future New FTX CEO details 'complete failure of corporate controls' at crypto platform OpenSSL Usage in UEFI Firmware Exposes Weakness in SBOMs EU reaches agreement on new satellite constellation - The Record by Recorded Future Ukraine's Engineers Dodged Russian Mines To Get Kherson Back Online–With A Little Help From Elon Musk's Satellites Senate Democrats call on FTC to investigate Twitter's data security 11.17.22 - FTC - Twitter Letter Twitter has a lot of your data. Here's what you can do about it. Mastodon vulnerable to multiple system configuration problems | The Daily Swig System misconfiguration is the number one vulnerability, at least for Mastodon White House expected to issue executive order reining in spyware H20220930-005_Himes-Speier cc's - DocumentCloud A Leak Details Apple's Secret Dirt on Corellium, a Trusted Security Startup | WIRED Risky Biz News: Iranian state hackers breached US government agency and deployed a cryptominer, out of all things India removes ban on VLC media player after cybersecurity concerns addressed - The Record by Recorded Future Amazon addresses vulnerability affecting AWS AppSync - The Record by Recorded Future CVE-2022-41924 - RCE in Tailscale, DNS Rebinding, and You Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations | CISA Impacket and Exfiltration Tool Used to Steal Sensitive Information from Defense Industrial Base Organization | CISA

The CyberWire
CISA Alert AA22-257A – Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations. [CISA Cybersecurity Alerts]

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 2:31


This joint Cybersecurity Advisory highlights continued malicious cyber activity by advanced persistent threat actors affiliated with the Iranian Government's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The IRGC-affiliated actors are actively targeting a broad range of entities, including entities across multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors as well as Australian, Canadian, and United Kingdom organizations.  AA22-257A Alert, Technical Details, and Mitigations AA22-257A.stix CISA's Iran Cyber Threat Overview and Advisories FBI's Iran Threat webpage. Iranian Government-Sponsored APT Cyber Actors Exploiting Microsoft Exchange and Fortinet Vulnerabilities in Furtherance of Malicious Activities Technical Approaches to Uncovering and Remediating Malicious Activity All organizations should report incidents and anomalous activity to CISA's 24/7 Operations Center at central@cisa.dhs.gov or (888) 282-0870 and to the FBI via your local FBI field office or the FBI's 24/7 CyWatch at (855) 292-3937 or CyWatch@fbi.gov.

CISA Cybersecurity Alerts
CISA Alert AA22-257A – Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations.

CISA Cybersecurity Alerts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 2:31


This joint Cybersecurity Advisory highlights continued malicious cyber activity by advanced persistent threat actors affiliated with the Iranian Government's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The IRGC-affiliated actors are actively targeting a broad range of entities, including entities across multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors as well as Australian, Canadian, and United Kingdom organizations.  AA22-257A Alert, Technical Details, and Mitigations AA22-257A.stix CISA's Iran Cyber Threat Overview and Advisories FBI's Iran Threat webpage. Iranian Government-Sponsored APT Cyber Actors Exploiting Microsoft Exchange and Fortinet Vulnerabilities in Furtherance of Malicious Activities Technical Approaches to Uncovering and Remediating Malicious Activity All organizations should report incidents and anomalous activity to CISA's 24/7 Operations Center at central@cisa.dhs.gov or (888) 282-0870 and to the FBI via your local FBI field office or the FBI's 24/7 CyWatch at (855) 292-3937 or CyWatch@fbi.gov.

The CyberWire
Patch Tuesday notes. Mr. Mudge goes to Washington. Joint warning of IRGC cyber activity. No major developments in the cyber phases of Russia's hybrid war (but Ukraine is sounding confident).

The CyberWire

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 36:03


Patch Tuesday notes. The US Senate Judiciary Committee hears from the Twitter whistleblower. Joint warning of IRGC cyber activity. Rob Boyce from Accenture on cybercriminals weaponizing leaked ransomware data. Chris Novak from Verizon describes his participation in the CISA Advisory Board. And Ukraine reiterates confidence in its resiliency. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/177 Selected reading. Adobe Patches 63 Security Flaws in Patch Tuesday Bundle (SecurityWeek) Microsoft Releases September 2022 Security Updates (CISA) Microsoft's September Patch Tuesday fixes five critical bugs (Computing) Microsoft Raises Alert for Under-Attack Windows Flaw (SecurityWeek) SAP Security Patch Day September 2022 (Onapsis)  Apple Releases Security Updates for Multiple Products (CISA) Apple fixes eighth zero-day used to hack iPhones and Macs this year (BleepingComputer)  Apple Will Let You Remove Rapid Security Response Updates in iOS 16 (Mac Rumors) Data Security at Risk: Testimony from a Twitter Whistleblower (United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary) Twitter Employees Have Too Much Access to Data, Whistleblower Says (Wall Street Journal)  Twitter whistleblower reveals employees concerned China agent could collect user data (Reuters) Security failures cause ‘real harm to real people' (Washington Post) Twitter whistleblower testifies to Congress, calls for tech regulation reforms (The Record by Recorded Future) The Search for Dirt on the Twitter Whistle-Blower (The New Yorker) Whistle-Blower Says Twitter ‘Chose to Mislead' on Security Flaws (New York Times)  Twitter whistleblower says site put growth over security (Computing)  Written Statement of Peiter (“Mudge”) Zatko United States Senate Judiciary Committee September 13, 2022 (Katz Banks Kumin)  What we learned when Twitter whistleblower Mudge testified to Congress (TechCrunch)  How China became big business for Twitter (Reuters) Twitter whistleblower exposes limits of FTC's power (Washington Post) Twitter Whistle-Blower Testimony Spurs Calls for Tech Regulator (Bloomberg) Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations (CISA) Ukraine's Cyberwar Chief Sounds Like He's Winning (WIRED)  DDoS attacks on financial sector surge during war in Ukraine, new FCA data reveals (PR Newswire)

Ctrl+Alt+Azure
089 - Azure Disk Encryption for Linux

Ctrl+Alt+Azure

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 34:04


Jussi's ground floor chart Azure Data Encryption at rest (Microsoft Docs) dm-crypt (Wikipedia) Get-AzVMDiskEncryptionStatus (Microsoft Docs) Securing your Linux VMs in Azure with Azure Disk Encryption (Jussi)

Craig Peterson's Tech Talk
Uncovering the Mystery of Disk Encryption plus more on this Tech Talk with Craig Peterson Podcast

Craig Peterson's Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2020 11:03


Craig helps to unravel the mystery behind disk encryption and tells you what you need to know. For more tech tips, news, and updates, visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Trojan Malware Targets Trump Supporters Nmap 7.90 released: New fingerprints, NSE scripts, and Npcap 1.0.0 Tyler Technologies finally paid the ransom to receive the decryption key 5G in the US averages 51Mbps while other countries hit hundreds of megabits Apple’s T2 security chip has an unfixable flaw Verizon Payment Security Report is a Wake-up Call: Time to Refocus on PCI DSS Compliance Android Ransomware Has Picked Up Some Ominous New Trick --- Automated Machine-Generated Transcript: Craig Peterson: [00:00:00] Hey, welcome back in this hour, we are going to be talking about security, hardware, security. You might not be aware of it. we're going to be talking about trusted platforms and hardware, encryption, and keys because this is the only thing that's really going to protect you.  Thanks for listening. I'm Craig Peterson. Let's talk about that security. That's what we're going to kick off this hour with. And we're going to get into our new Verizon security report on payment, and then we'll get into some Android stuff, but. We had this week and announcement here. And this is about Apple. Apple has built hardware security inside most of its devices that includes the iPhones and include your Macs and Mac pros. You name it, really the iMacs, the Mac minis. They all have the hardware. Inside of them to help provide security. Now in the Apple world, it is a chip that Apple makes it's called a T2 security chip, and that makes sure that people cannot get onto your computer. The whole idea is if they have physical access to the computer, they cannot get inside. They can't make it boot off an external drive. They can't do just a whole ton of things get real deep system access. Back in the day, you used to boot off of read-only memory. Or proms, programmable read-only memory, those BIOSes that was in so many of the consumer pieces of equipment out there, and even some of the prosumer stuff that many businesses use. Those BIOSes were really cool, but they weren't secure at all.  The hard disks that machine could easily be removed and put onto another machine, they didn't even have to be booted up. You could just have another machine of a, for instance, my Mac, I can take a disk from a Windows computer. I have a device sitting there that's hooked up full time. That allows me to just plug a hard disc. just, you just slide it, And while the machine is up and running and it will Mount that disk. And let me do whatever I need to do investigative work or whatever, it might be very cool devices.  I can have two of those disks that I just plugin. I also use them for my video, where I am recording directly to SSDs. I move SSDs around, which is much faster than trying to push them over gigabit ethernet. So Apple has decided that this T2 chip is a good thing and it uses the T2 chip for a few different things. Once we're talking about your hard disc itself, the newer hard disks at the higher end and have the ability. To encrypt the data on the disc, which is, it's good. It's great. But that data that's encrypted on that disk can be read by the operating system. And that's the whole idea, right? If you can't read the disk, what good is it for you? So any data that's stored on that encrypted data is still available for your programs and is still available for hackers. So the disc encryption I'm talking about right now at the kind of the low end of all of this security stuff. It's designed so that when your computer is life it's over, or maybe the hard disc crashes, there's a little jumper that you can pull, or maybe there are the jumpers you short out on the disk. Just look it up online, do it. In fact, go search for your disc model number and you pull that jumper or you short out those terms and what happens at that point is your disk is now complete. Erased, but it's not really erased. It's like your iPhone. Have you been to the Apple store? You're trading in your iPhone. You want to get a brand new iPhone? Isn't this great. They have you turn off. Find my iPhone. That's the first thing they have you do. And then they say to erase the iPhone. And have you noticed it takes what? Five, 10 seconds. To erase the iPhone. How can you possibly erase hundreds of megabytes or gigabytes of data in five to 10 seconds? You cannot. So what's happening inside the iPhone is similar to what's happening with these basic encrypted disks. Okay. Everything that's written to these disks and everything written to your iPhone is encrypted. So if you want to make all of the data that's on that disk inaccessible or basically useless. All you have to do is destroy the key that was used to encrypt it. So think of a door that cannot possibly be breached and a key. There's only one key. You can't pick the lock. Okay. Oh, maybe this isn't the best of analogies, but if that key is destroyed, it's impossible at that point on to open that door. It's not like a real door where maybe you could take blow torches to a metal door or something right there. You can always get in, but it is completely effectively destroyed.  The data that's on that device. If the encryption is good, looks like just random data. There's no difference between completely random and. It has everybody's social security number, income, and addresses in the whole United States encrypted on it. Okay. So that's the low end. On your iPhone. When you go ahead and you erase your iPhone when you're trading it in or. If you have one of these encrypted hard disks where you just pull that jumper, it now destroys the key. That key now in both cases makes that disk, the data on the disc useless. Now that's cool. And the next time that disk is powered up, it's going to generate a brand new key and it's going to be hopefully pretty darn random. And now you can use it again, assuming the disc isn't bad. if you took it out, cause it was just totaled. So that's a very basic layer, but just like your iPhone, that encrypted disc has data, that's readable on it up until the time that you destroyed the data by destroying the key. You're with me so far. That's the very basics of how this all works. Now there's something called TPM, which stands for trusted platform module. This is an international standard that's been out now. It is a standard that describes a secure cryptoprocessor. That's what Apple's T2 security chip is all about. Now, the problem that came up this last week, this week, in fact, is that there is a flaw in Apple's trusted T2 security chip. And it's the flaw that apparently researchers have been using for more than a year to jailbreak older models of iPhones. We've heard I heard about this. We've heard that the FBI was able to get into iPhone and get at the data that's in them. There are well, there's one primary company it's over in Israel that sells a device that lets the police break into iPhones.  I'm just talking about iPhones right now. Many of the Android devices are very easy to break into as well, but Apple is really trying to make these things secure. That's why they came up with this chip of their own, which is really a kind of a trusted platform module. So they have been using this flaw in order to jailbreak into the iPhones. And the way that this T2 chip is vulnerable is a problem. And the slightly bigger problem is that this particular problem is ultimately unfixable. In every Mac that has a T2 inside, that is a lot that T2 chip launched in 2017 and it created some limitations. Many people have used macs to run Linux for many years. It's a great little Linux computer. We know that PC magazine had on its front cover or was a PC world. The cover said the best PC for windows is a Mac because they were just that solid. But because of the T2 chip, when it was introduced in 2017, all of a sudden problems started to arise for people. they effectively hacking their Macs. Apple added the chip so that it had a trusted mechanism to secure the device. The biggest reason for adding this chip or a TPM, this trusted platform module, which is available on many windows, computers is encrypted data storage. Now, in some cases, the TPM or the T2 chip. Apple is also used for touch ID and activation log that all works with Apples find my iPhone type services. So this vulnerability is known as checkM8 and the jailbreakers as we mentioned, they've been exploiting problems with Apples, A5 through A 11 chipsets that's from 2011 to 2017. Now the same group that developed the tool for iOS has released support for a T2 bypass. This is not good people. It just plain old is not good. Now we're going to. Pick this up. When we come back, I'm going to talk about the trusted platform, modules of vendors that are using it over on the windows space, how Apple's using it, how this whole black box things work works, and we're going to move up. We talked about the hardware-based disc encryption. That's right there on the hard disc. We're going to move up the stack and talk about other types of encryption, including encryption. On the fly and encryption at rest, both are important concepts to understand when we're talking about security and system integrity. Hey, you're listening to Craig Peterson. Stick around. We'll be right back. --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553

Destination Linux
Episode 182: Destination Linux 182: Security Keys, Disk Encryption & Two Factor Authentication (2FA)

Destination Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 59:48


Destination Linux 182: Security Keys, Disk Encryption & Two Factor Authentication (2FA) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-182 - Hosted by Ryan, Noah & Michael Coming up on this week's episode of Destination Linux: Google & Canonical are teaming up to bring Flutter to Linux for a cross-platform game changer. How Important is Disk Encryption & Security Keys - should you be using them or do you just prefer being hacked? We've got community feedback, a DRM FREE Game called Drox Operative and our beloved tips/tricks and software pick. All of this and so much more on this week's Destination Linux. DL Hosts: Ryan, aka DasGeek = https://dasgeekcommunity.com Noah of Ask Noah Show = https://asknoahshow.com Michael of TuxDigital = https://tuxdigital.com Want to Support the Show? Support us on Patreon = https://destinationlinux.org/patreon Support us on Sponsus = https://destinationlinux.org/sponsus Destination Linux Network Store = https://destinationlinux.network/store Want to follow the show and hosts on social media? You can find all of our social accounts at https://destinationlinux.org/contact Topics covered in this episode: Full Show Notes (for links and such) https://destinationlinux.org/episode-182 00:00 Intro 01:06 What's New with Noah 01:10 Ubiquiti Discontinues Their UniFi-Video Products 07:30 What's New with Michael 07:42 DLN Xtend gets 2 New Hosts 08:23 What's New with Ryan 08:50 PyCharm Impresses Ryan With Their Customer Support 12:19 Community Feedback: Josh lets us know Collabora via Nextcloud has become so much easier these days 15:40 Canonical & Google team up to bring Flutter Apps to Linux 20:13 Michael expresses his frustrations with False Claims about Snaps 21:18 Michael: Snaps having a company backing it is a good thing 23:00 Discussion: are these cross-platform frameworks going to bring more Proprietary software or more Open software? 23:30 Is it better to advocate for only Open or try to convince companies in phases? 27:46 Security Advisory of the Week: Disk Encryption & Should You Do It? 34:41 Main Topic: Two Factor Authentication (2FA) - Tips On How To Protect Your Accounts 50:08 Gaming on Linux: Drox Operative 2 51:28 Software Spotlight: Solfege - Ear Training Program 52:32 Ryan shows off his harmonica skills 53:02 Tip of the Week: How To Reset A Forgotten Root Password? 57:16 Become a Patron of DL ( https://destinationlinux.org/contribute ) 57:43 Show Your Support with DL Swag from the DLN Store ( https://destinationlinux.network/store ) 58:18 Join the Fraggle-Rockin' DLN Community ( https://destinationlinux.network/contact ) 58:58 More content at DestinationLinux.Network ( https://destinationlinux.network ) 59:13 New DLN Podcast: the Sudo Show ( https://sudo.show ) 59:20 New Cast on DLN Xtend ( https://dlnxtend.com ) 59:26 The Journey Itself . . . 59:35 Preview of the Patron Postshow ( https://destinationlinux.org/contribute ) Linux #OpenSource #Podcast

Destination Linux
Destination Linux 182: Security Keys, Disk Encryption & Two Factor Authentication (2FA)

Destination Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 59:49


Coming up on this week’s episode of Destination Linux: Google & Canonical are teaming up to bring Flutter to Linux for a cross-platform game changer. How Important is Disk Encryption & Security Keys – should you be using them or do you just prefer being hacked? We’ve got community feedback, a DRM FREE Game called […]

Hack the Planet
I Can Do This Real Quick: A DMA Special

Hack the Planet

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2020 127:09


In this episode of the Hack the Planet Podcast: Our panel reacts to the hype around recent Thunderbolt attacks and dives deep into bypassing disk encryption with Direct Memory Access. We also show off our side projects: a newly invented musical instrument, a rewrite of The Backdoor Factory, and how to maximize your Folding@Home performance … Continue reading "I Can Do This Real Quick: A DMA Special"

Linux Action News
Linux Action News 92

Linux Action News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2019 29:34


A week of nasty security flaws, and a lack of patches... For some of us. Raspberry Pi opens a physical store, our thoughts on the new LibreOffice interface, and the new round of nasty flaws hitting all versions of Android. Plus new disk encryption coming to Linux, Intel releases their open source encoder for future video on the web, and more.

android intel linux raspberry pi aes openoffice libreoffice action news disk encryption adiantum linux action show raspberry pi store linux 5.0 linux news podcast
Linux Action News
Linux Action News 92

Linux Action News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2019 29:34


A week of nasty security flaws, and a lack of patches... For some of us. Raspberry Pi opens a physical store, our thoughts on the new LibreOffice interface, and the new round of nasty flaws hitting all versions of Android. Plus new disk encryption coming to Linux, Intel releases their open source encoder for future video on the web, and more.

android intel linux raspberry pi aes openoffice libreoffice action news disk encryption adiantum linux action show raspberry pi store linux 5.0 linux news podcast
Linux Action News
Linux Action News 92

Linux Action News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2019 29:34


A week of nasty security flaws, and a lack of patches... For some of us. Raspberry Pi opens a physical store, our thoughts on the new LibreOffice interface, and the new round of nasty flaws hitting all versions of Android. Plus new disk encryption coming to Linux, Intel releases their open source encoder for future video on the web, and more.

android intel linux raspberry pi aes openoffice libreoffice action news disk encryption adiantum linux action show raspberry pi store linux 5.0 linux news podcast
NoLimitSecu
Full Disk Encryption

NoLimitSecu

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2019 43:19


Episode #209 conscacré au Full Disk Encryption Avec Christophe Renard The post Full Disk Encryption appeared first on NoLimitSecu.

disk encryption
Loose Leaf Security
Physical attacks to your computers and disk encryption

Loose Leaf Security

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2018 34:47


Liz and Geoffrey are back with a look at physical computer security - just how much trouble could someone cause if they got access to your laptop for a few minutes? - and what sorts of problems disk encryption can and cannot solve. Also, security issues at popular social media services cause trouble for 90 million Facebook users and every Google+ user.Show notes, timeline, and full transcript on looseleafsecurity.com

JAMF Software Podcast
Understand FileVault 2 and Manage Disk Encryption with the Casper Suite

JAMF Software Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2013 62:32


JAMF Software Podcast
Webcast - Securing the Mac OS: Full Disk Encryption using Sophos SafeGuard

JAMF Software Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2010 36:27


Linuxbasix mp3 feed
025 - Nautilus Scripts, FreeBSD Tips, Portaudit, Boot Process, GoingLinux, Plop, chroot, DNS Blacklisting, Disk Encryption, Knuckle is having fun

Linuxbasix mp3 feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2010 93:15


Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)
Mac Geek Gab #169: ACMT, Lightning, and PGP Whole Disk Encryption

Mac Geek Gab (Enhanced AAC)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2008


Take John F. Braun, Dave Hamilton, Pilot Pete and a week's worth of questions, pack them into one (virtual!) room, and what do you get? MGG 169 is the answer, and packed is the word! Your geeks talk through some printer software advice and Apple Consultant training. Plus, John found […]