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by AlyssaRowan
4148 days ago
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Deniable encryption schemes are meant to protect the confidentiality of data under duress. They are not meant to protect the person placed under duress. Indeed, for some schemes, even if someone cooperates fully, they will be unable to prove that they have, which could leave them in a very dangerous situation. It will also be difficult to prove that they haven't cooperated fully, but whether that is relevant depends on the type of duress they face - you may have varying degrees of success or failure facing thresholds of 'beyond reasonable doubt', 'preponderance of the evidence', or 'hammer to the kneecaps'. A vitally important thing to know, if you're a keyholder of such a system. Given such a disadvantage, they are not very commonly used. The vast majority of all those who use (and have used) TrueCrypt don't use hidden volumes. It's also worth pointing out that any disk usage metadata - as, for example, is kept by any and every SSD - tends to catastrophically break deniability. I don't know of anything that can do deniability with a flash device. |
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