"Sebastian G." <seppi@seppig.de> wrote in
news:613o4rF1taan2U2@mid.dfncis.de:
> nemo_outis wrote:
>
>
>> And it doesn't matter a whit! Truecrypt can completely protect the OS
>> and all data.
>
>
> And this was never disputed. Disputed was the claim that the entire
> disk was encrypted whereas the partition table and the boot sector is
> obviously not. And sadly since TrueCrypt does not offer any mechanism
> so store the boot sector on another media, both are mutually
> exclusive.
>
> And it does matter, since it disallows for plausible deniability.
If that "other media" is permanently attached to the system (i.e.,
"fixed") then plausible deniability is still shot. Since Microsoft only
supports booting normal Windows (not PE, not embedded) from fixed media,
what you want is unachievable with Windows as the OS (without violating
the licence).
However, if you are still worried about plausible deniability (although
there being a good reason for having a system that contains only disks
with random data strikes me as the epitome of implausible) then do as I
suggested several posts earlier in this thread: overwrite track 0 with
random junk after each session and restore it again at the start of the
next session (most conveniently, by using the OTFE recovery disk/CD).
Now be sure to post again, Sebastian, with more of your nonsensical
attempts to complicate and obfuscate the straighfoprward.
Regards,