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by rambambam
3915 days ago
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This company states that privacy is very important to them. It's also to me. But now I'm wondering, what's the purpose of the killswitch besides having no wifi-connection for a certain period of time? I mean, when you switch back to enable wifi again, everything you did on your computer during 'airgap-time' is still there, waiting to be compromised by corps/govs? Isn't it? Please correct me if I'm wrong. I'm really curious to this concept. P.S. I really dig the design of their laptops. edit: Changed markup and added P.S. |
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* Heightened risk of compromise in particular physical locations?
* Use in conjunction with something like TAILS so it's harder for someone who breaks into your computer to achieve persistence?
* Decreased risk of compromises that involve multiple machines attacking each other?
* Attackers may be wary of storing huge amounts of data persistently because the associated changes in storage media could be detected by forensic spot-checks?
(The third one probably requires that the forensic examination can get access to everywhere that the data could be stashed ... like nonvolatile memory inside onboard devices, not just the hard drive and main RAM contents.)