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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 01-12-2011, 11:48 PM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:

> On Jan 12, 6:08*pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>
>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>
>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>> BitLocker drives."

>
> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?


Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...

Plausible and deniable...they never see it...

Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 01-12-2011, 11:49 PM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 19:48:22 -0500, DasFox wrote:

> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>
>> On Jan 12, 6:08*pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>
>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>
>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>> BitLocker drives."

>>
>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?

>
> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>
> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>
> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>
> THANKS


"Double Truecrypt, now there's a fancy, new TECH term.

*NOT*

*ROFL*
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 12:02 AM
Maaartin
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

It's really old "news", the like is nearly one year old, and was
discussed on
http://forums.truecrypt.org/viewtopic.php?t=19681
In short, "the first commercially available software to break
TrueCrypt" is yet to come.

Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 12:46 AM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 17:02:14 -0800 (PST), Maaartin wrote:

> It's really old "news", the like is nearly one year old, and was
> discussed on http://forums.truecrypt.org/viewtopic.php?t=19681 In
> short, "the first commercially available software to break
> TrueCrypt" is yet to come.


That about sums it up, Old, valueless and not news.
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 05:53 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:

>
>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:

>
>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/

>
>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>> BitLocker drives."

>
>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?

>
>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...

>
>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...

>
>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?

>
>> THANKS

>
>> --
>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>> Not me...

>
> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
> anything.


Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

If you are innocent, act like it...

Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...

Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 06:48 AM
nix
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 01:53:17 -0500, DasFox wrote:

> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>
>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:

>>
>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:

>>
>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/

>>
>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>> BitLocker drives."

>>
>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?

>>
>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...

>>
>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...

>>
>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?

>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>>> --
>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>> Not me...

>>
>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>> anything.

>
> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>
> If you are innocent, act like it...
>
> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>
> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>
> THANKS


DasFox,,,be (be)(a)ware. Think thrice or be (virtually) fired,,,at the
kiln.

<http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>

Can you feel my-the heat? I can definitely feel the heat. So I’m going
to go ahead and call it a fire. Because these virtual fires can be
hard to see and contain. Unless you have infrared sensing, like a
snake. Or cretin trying to escape.

http://preview.tinyurl.com/ygamrpt

So, which one of the “stakeholders” is supposed to put this out? Or
shall we watch it rage?

Did I hear you trickle? That this takes the shape of parts known and
unknown?

<http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>

Femoral to your left? Vulva to front? Exploding clitoris? Vaguely
breasts alluded?

Either/or one is ok with me. I like to study pyrotechnic composition.
Especially in cyberspace. ;) ;) Call; e-mail; contact. ;0)
--
I want love and kisses and ponies in a field of ****ographic pleasure.

Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 08:06 AM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 02:48:18 -0500, nix wrote:

> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 01:53:17 -0500, DasFox wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>
>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>
>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>
>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>
>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>
>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>
>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>
>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>> Not me...
>>>
>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>> anything.

>>
>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>
>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>
>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>
>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>
>> THANKS

>
> DasFox,,,be (be)(a)ware. Think thrice or be (virtually) fired,,,at the
> kiln.
>
> <http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>
>
> Can you feel my-the heat? I can definitely feel the heat. So I’m going
> to go ahead and call it a fire. Because these virtual fires can be
> hard to see and contain. Unless you have infrared sensing, like a
> snake. Or cretin trying to escape.
>
> http://preview.tinyurl.com/ygamrpt
>
> So, which one of the “stakeholders” is supposed to put this out? Or
> shall we watch it rage?
>
> Did I hear you trickle? That this takes the shape of parts known and
> unknown?
>
> <http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>
>
> Femoral to your left? Vulva to front? Exploding clitoris? Vaguely
> breasts alluded?
>
> Either/or one is ok with me. I like to study pyrotechnic composition.
> Especially in cyberspace. ;) ;) Call; e-mail; contact. ;0)


*LOL*
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 08:11 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:06:58 -0500, Ari Silverstein wrote:

> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 02:48:18 -0500, nix wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 01:53:17 -0500, DasFox wrote:
>>
>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>
>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>
>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>
>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>
>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>
>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>
>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>
>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>
>>>>> THANKS
>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>> Not me...
>>>>
>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>> anything.
>>>
>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>
>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>
>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>
>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>> DasFox,,,be (be)(a)ware. Think thrice or be (virtually) fired,,,at the
>> kiln.
>>
>> <http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>
>>
>> Can you feel my-the heat? I can definitely feel the heat. So I’m going
>> to go ahead and call it a fire. Because these virtual fires can be
>> hard to see and contain. Unless you have infrared sensing, like a
>> snake. Or cretin trying to escape.
>>
>> http://preview.tinyurl.com/ygamrpt
>>
>> So, which one of the “stakeholders” is supposed to put this out? Or
>> shall we watch it rage?
>>
>> Did I hear you trickle? That this takes the shape of parts known and
>> unknown?
>>
>> <http://platanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/800px-DancingFlames-Copy.jpg>
>>
>> Femoral to your left? Vulva to front? Exploding clitoris? Vaguely
>> breasts alluded?
>>
>> Either/or one is ok with me. I like to study pyrotechnic composition.
>> Especially in cyberspace. ;) ;) Call; e-mail; contact. ;0)

>
> *LOL*


LOL all you want but Nancy talks TECH...

You...? Talk CRAP...FRANK CAMPER...

THANKS


--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 06:50 PM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>
>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>> BitLocker drives."

>
>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>> THANKS

>
>> --
>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>> Not me...

>
>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>> anything.

>
>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

>
>> If you are innocent, act like it...

>
>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...

>
>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

>
>> THANKS

>
>> --
>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>> Not me...

>
> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>
> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone
> that his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.


If it is deleted, how the hell are you going to read it?
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 06:57 PM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>
>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>> BitLocker drives."

>
>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>> THANKS

>
>> --
>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>> Not me...

>
>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>> anything.

>
>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

>
>> If you are innocent, act like it...

>
>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...

>
>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

>
>> THANKS

>
>> --
>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>> Not me...

>
> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!


PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...

> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
> suffering from psychotic sickness.


Truthtelling will PREVENT this...

> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.


I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...

Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...

The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
the RIGHT...wingers...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 01-13-2011, 09:30 PM
Nomen Nescio
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>
>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>>
>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>> BitLocker drives."

>>
>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>> THANKS

>>
>>> --
>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>> Not me...

>>
>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>> anything.

>>
>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

>>
>>> If you are innocent, act like it...

>>
>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...

>>
>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>>> --
>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>> Not me...

>>
>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!

>
> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>
>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>> suffering from psychotic sickness.

>
> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>
>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.

>
> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>
> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>
> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
> the RIGHT...wingers...
>
> THANKS


Wouldn't ever trust DasFox to fold MY parachute.

THANKS.












































































Reply With Quote
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 12:11 AM
Anonymous
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>
>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:

>>
>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>> BitLocker drives."

>>
>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>> THANKS

>>
>>> --
>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>> Not me...

>>
>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>> anything.

>>
>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

>>
>>> If you are innocent, act like it...

>>
>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...

>>
>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>>> --
>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>> Not me...

>>
>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!

>
> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>
>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>> suffering from psychotic sickness.

>
> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>
>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.

>
> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>
> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>
> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
> the RIGHT...wingers...
>
> THANKS


Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?

Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?












































































Reply With Quote
  #13 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 12:32 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:

> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>
>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>
>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>> Not me...
>>>
>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>> anything.
>>>
>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>
>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>
>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>
>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>> Not me...
>>>
>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!

>>
>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>
>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.

>>
>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>
>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.

>>
>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>
>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>
>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>
>> THANKS

>
> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>
> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?


Like you...LOL...?

Talk Tech or STFU...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #14 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 12:34 AM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:

> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>
>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>
>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>> Not me...
>>>
>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>> anything.
>>>
>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>
>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>
>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>
>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>> Not me...
>>>
>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!

>>
>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>
>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.

>>
>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>
>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.

>>
>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>
>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>
>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>
>> THANKS

>
> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?


That's like asking "which retard **** his diapers"

> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?


Me first.
--
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Reply With Quote
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 01:31 AM
Bryan
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

DasFox wrote:
> If you are innocent, act like it...
>
> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>
> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...


Ah, advice from someone who reads about pulling keys from RAM and goes
all, "No BRUTE FORCE...? What the...?". James Duane, professor of law
and former defense attorney, advises different, at least in the U.S.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc

If the link doesn't work, just Google up "don't talk to police".

--
--Bryan

Reply With Quote
  #16 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 01:52 AM
Evgeney Knyazhev
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?

-----------

Just to say truly, to encrypt hdd has no sense in dozen cases :-) if
you have desktop, then Prime goals to security are to not allow any
physical & remote access w\o permissions; if laptop, then valuable
info must be stored on the remote hdd through ciphered connection &
keys don't have to be in laptop. however, laptop could be geared with
device to kill hdd remotely. but each of possible solutions have many
minuses. In any cases, if your machine can be accessed physically or
remotely by strangers from the night, encrypted hdd will not be too
steadfast Wall to stop strangers off your data XD

Reply With Quote
  #17 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 03:43 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 18:31:19 -0800 (PST), Bryan wrote:

> DasFox wrote:
>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>
>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>
>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...

>
> Ah, advice from someone who reads about pulling keys from RAM and goes
> all, "No BRUTE FORCE...? What the...?". James Duane, professor of law
> and former defense attorney, advises different, at least in the U.S.
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc
>
> If the link doesn't work, just Google up "don't talk to police".


Dude, if you don't talk Truth to police, how can you use your rights
to be silent...?

Here's LAW...

<http://jurist.org/paperchase/2010/06/supreme-court-holds-right-to-remain-silent.php>

LAW says talk...

You snipped the part where I talked and got off being busted by
police...

Immature and unprofessional of you...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #18 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 03:44 AM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 18:52:05 -0800 (PST), Evgeney Knyazhev wrote:

>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?

> -----------
>
> Just to say truly, to encrypt hdd has no sense in dozen cases :-) if
> you have desktop, then Prime goals to security are to not allow any
> physical & remote access w\o permissions; if laptop, then valuable
> info must be stored on the remote hdd through ciphered connection &
> keys don't have to be in laptop. however, laptop could be geared with
> device to kill hdd remotely. but each of possible solutions have many
> minuses. In any cases, if your machine can be accessed physically or
> remotely by strangers from the night, encrypted hdd will not be too
> steadfast Wall to stop strangers off your data XD


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
What he said.

I think. lol
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #19 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 02:24 PM
Prinzip Gavrilo
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

In article <igok90$s20$1@news.mixmin.net>, DasFox <dasfox@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Dude, if you don't talk Truth to police, how can you use your rights
> to be silent...?


Don't be a ****ing idiot. The only "Truth" you need to "talk" is to tell
the polis that you wish to remain silent. That's all. The ruling that
you cite says that you have to be "unambiguous" about invoking your
right to silence.

Note that in the United Kingdom, they've watered down this right quite a
bit, so that "adverse inferences" may be drawn from one's silence.

> You snipped the part where I talked and got off being busted by
> police...


Yeah. The Policeman Is Your Friend, right? You probably had a small
amount and the cop wanted to go to the donut shop.
--
Next year in Sarajevo ...

Reply With Quote
  #20 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 03:20 PM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 10:24:19 -0500, Prinzip Gavrilo wrote:

> In article <igok90$s20$1@news.mixmin.net>, DasFox <dasfox@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Dude, if you don't talk Truth to police, how can you use your rights
>> to be silent...?

>
> Don't be a ****ing idiot.


This isn't your GRANNY you're talking to, Bub...

> The only "Truth" you need to "talk" is to tell the polis that you
> wish to remain silent. That's all. The ruling that you cite says
> that you have to be "unambiguous" about invoking your right to
> silence.


Wrong but you snipped it away because you know you are wrong...

> Note that in the United Kingdom,


Who cares accept for us (U.S.A.), you'd be face down in London Bridge
ash and singing "Put you wienerschnitzel in me again"...LOL

>> You snipped the part where I talked and got off being busted by
>> police...

>
> Yeah. The Policeman Is Your Friend, right? You probably had a small
> amount and the cop wanted to go to the donut shop.


No comment on amount. You think you're hashing it out with a NOOB...?

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #21 (permalink)  
Old 01-14-2011, 09:27 PM
Dave U. Random
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>
>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>
>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>
>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>> THANKS
>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>> Not me...
>>>>
>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>> anything.
>>>>
>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>
>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>
>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>
>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>
>>>>> THANKS
>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>> Not me...
>>>>
>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>
>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>
>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>
>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>
>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>
>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>
>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>
>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>
>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?

>
> Like you...LOL...?
>
> Talk Tech or STFU...
>
> THANKS


Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?

I communicate via ideas, not identities. You have traces of your identity haphazardly plastered everywhere. That has been your downfall.

If someone has compromised your identity, PGP sign your posts.

If you know how...

Or..

STFU.

THANKS














































































Reply With Quote
  #22 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 12:59 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:58:40 +0100 (CET), Anne Onime wrote:

> In article <gavrilo.prinzip-2E6EE0.10241814012011@news.mixmin.net>
> Prinzip Gavrilo <gavrilo.prinzip@elbrubrlegargle.rl> wrote:
>>

>
>> The only "Truth" you need to "talk" is to tell
>> the polis that you wish to remain silent. That's all. The ruling that
>> you cite says that you have to be "unambiguous" about invoking your
>> right to silence.
>>
>> Note that in the United Kingdom, they've watered down this right quite a
>> bit, so that "adverse inferences" may be drawn from one's silence.

>
> In the U.S., too, we have watered it down. Too much silence can
> lead to water-boarding.


Untruth...name this Fox one case of waterboarding from silence of US
Citizen...CAN'T...

>> Yeah. The Policeman Is Your Friend, right? You probably had a small
>> amount and the cop wanted to go to the donut shop.
>> --

>
> DassFox, the police are not your friend unless they believe that
> they can control you. Do you want someone else dictating how you
> can act? Step out of line, and you will see how friendly they
> really can be. Do not be naive.
>
> FBI=PIG


Stay off PIG's radar then...Use Tech on your computers for instance...
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #23 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 01:10 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:27:53 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:

> On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>>
>>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>>
>>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>
>>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>>> anything.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>>
>>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>>
>>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>>
>>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>>
>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>
>>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>>
>>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>>
>>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>>
>>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>>
>>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>>
>>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>>
>>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>>
>>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>>
>>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?

>>
>> Like you...LOL...?
>>
>> Talk Tech or STFU...
>>
>> THANKS

>
> Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
> Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?


Dishonest post...put your PGP or STFU.

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #24 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 04:03 AM
Ari Silverstein
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 20:59:27 -0500, DasFox wrote:

> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:58:40 +0100 (CET), Anne Onime wrote:
>
>> In article <gavrilo.prinzip-2E6EE0.10241814012011@news.mixmin.net>
>> Prinzip Gavrilo <gavrilo.prinzip@elbrubrlegargle.rl> wrote:
>>>

>>
>>> The only "Truth" you need to "talk" is to tell
>>> the polis that you wish to remain silent. That's all. The ruling that
>>> you cite says that you have to be "unambiguous" about invoking your
>>> right to silence.
>>>
>>> Note that in the United Kingdom, they've watered down this right quite a
>>> bit, so that "adverse inferences" may be drawn from one's silence.

>>
>> In the U.S., too, we have watered it down. Too much silence can
>> lead to water-boarding.

>
> Untruth...name this Fox one case of waterboarding from silence of US
> Citizen...CAN'T...
>
>>> Yeah. The Policeman Is Your Friend, right? You probably had a small
>>> amount and the cop wanted to go to the donut shop.
>>> --

>>
>> DassFox, the police are not your friend unless they believe that
>> they can control you. Do you want someone else dictating how you
>> can act? Step out of line, and you will see how friendly they
>> really can be. Do not be naive.
>>
>> FBI=PIG

>
> Stay off PIG's radar then...Use Tech on your computers for instance...


Yeah, that'll work against the monstrously high TECHnically advantaged
TLAs.

But, hey, don't let me stop you from thinking you can outFox the
entire intelligence community.

*ROFL*
--
“If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of
men, I will find something in them which will hang him.” ~Cardinal
Richelieu

Reply With Quote
  #25 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 01:04 PM
Anonymous
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On 1/14/2011 6:10 PM, DasFox wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:27:53 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:
>
>> On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>>>> anything.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>>>
>>>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>>>
>>>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>>>
>>>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>>>
>>>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>>>
>>>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>>>
>>>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>>>
>>>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>>>
>>>>> THANKS
>>>>
>>>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>>>
>>>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?
>>>
>>> Like you...LOL...?
>>>
>>> Talk Tech or STFU...
>>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>> Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
>> Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?

>
> Dishonest post...put your PGP or STFU.
>
> THANKS


I am anonymous.

You are Paul Fox.

I requested your PGP signature.

You countered with a request.

I defer to you. Ladies first, of course.

I now know you are dishonest.

You don't know how to make one, do you Paul?

Sorry about your luck.























































































Reply With Quote
  #26 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 09:03 PM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 15:04:52 +0100 (CET), Anonymous wrote:

> On 1/14/2011 6:10 PM, DasFox wrote:
>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:27:53 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:
>>
>>> On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>>>>> anything.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>>>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>
>>>>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>>>>
>>>>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?
>>>>
>>>> Like you...LOL...?
>>>>
>>>> Talk Tech or STFU...
>>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>> Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
>>> Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?

>>
>> Dishonest post...put your PGP or STFU.
>>
>> THANKS

>
> I am anonymous.
>
> You are Paul Fox.


No. Ca,per was wrong if so...PROOF IT...

> I requested your PGP signature.
>
> You countered with a request.
>
> I defer to you. Ladies first, of course.


Dishonest post...put YOUR PGP or STFU. Otherwise all ANONYMOUS are
SAME...

> I now know you are dishonest.
>
> You don't know how to make one, do you Paul?
>
> Sorry about your luck.


THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #27 (permalink)  
Old 01-15-2011, 11:25 PM
Dave U. Random
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On 1/15/2011 2:03 PM, DasFox wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 15:04:52 +0100 (CET), Anonymous wrote:
>
>> On 1/14/2011 6:10 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:27:53 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>>>>>> anything.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>>>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>>>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>>>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>>>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>>>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>>>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>>>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>>>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>>>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>>>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>>>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>>>>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?
>>>>>
>>>>> Like you...LOL...?
>>>>>
>>>>> Talk Tech or STFU...
>>>>>
>>>>> THANKS
>>>>
>>>> Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
>>>> Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?
>>>
>>> Dishonest post...put your PGP or STFU.
>>>
>>> THANKS

>>
>> I am anonymous.
>>
>> You are Paul Fox.

>
> No. Ca,per was wrong if so...PROOF IT...
>
>> I requested your PGP signature.
>>
>> You countered with a request.
>>
>> I defer to you. Ladies first, of course.

>
> Dishonest post...put YOUR PGP or STFU. Otherwise all ANONYMOUS are
> SAME...


That's the whole ****ing point, you moron.

You can take your Wilders culture and stick it up your ***.

You are absolutely one of the worst examples of an anonymous citizen
I have ever seen.


















































































































Reply With Quote
  #28 (permalink)  
Old 01-16-2011, 12:08 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Sun, 16 Jan 2011 01:25:44 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:

> On 1/15/2011 2:03 PM, DasFox wrote:
>> On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 15:04:52 +0100 (CET), Anonymous wrote:
>>
>>> On 1/14/2011 6:10 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:27:53 +0100 (CET), Dave U. Random wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 1/13/2011 5:32 PM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>>> On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 01:11:53 +0000 (UTC), Anonymous wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 1/13/2011 11:57 AM, DasFox wrote:
>>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:00:07 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On Thu, 13 Jan 2011 04:20:18 +0100 (CET), Nomen Nescio wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2011 16:29:31 -0800 (PST), PostMaster wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On Jan 12, 6:08 pm, Rooster <remai...@reece.net.au> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> has anyone here taken a look at this website:
>>>>>>>>>> http://www.legaltechtoday.com/2010/0...-kit-forensic-
>>>>>>>>>> decrypts-truecrypt-hard-disks-in-minutes-prnewswire/
>>>>>>>>>> "Passware Inc., a provider of password recovery, decryption, and
>>>>>>>>>> evidence discovery software for computer forensics, announced that
>>>>>>>>>> the latest version of its flagship product, Passware Kit Forensic,
>>>>>>>>>> has become the first commercially available software to break
>>>>>>>>>> TrueCrypt hard drive encryption without applying a time-consuming
>>>>>>>>>> brute-force attack. It was also the first product to decrypt
>>>>>>>>>> BitLocker drives."
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Damn I got all my income tax returns on a true crypt volume on one of
>>>>>>>>>> my pc's. Does this mean I need to use some other encryption program? I
>>>>>>>>>> always felt my private info was safe as long as I kept it encrypted.
>>>>>>>>>> Is there such thing as a safe (uncrackable) encryption?
>>>>>>>>>> Try double Truecrypt, a Truecrypt holder inside another one...
>>>>>>>>>> Plausible and deniable...they never see it...
>>>>>>>>>> Proven TECHnology...what can they do if they don't see it...?
>>>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> In America and Canada, don't mess around plausibly denying
>>>>>>>>>> anything. Just exercise your right to remain silent and don't
>>>>>>>>>> allow yourself to be pressured into saying (much less denying)
>>>>>>>>>> anything.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> If you are innocent, act like it...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Only tell the truth and let the truth set you free...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Don't be afraid of telling the TRUTH to anyone...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>>>> Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
>>>>>>>>>> Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
>>>>>>>>>> Not me...
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> That is very dangerous advice. Police and prosecutors are not
>>>>>>>>> interested in truth and justice. They are only interested in
>>>>>>>>> getting you to talk with them so as to gain information directly
>>>>>>>>> from you to use against you. No lawyer worth his salt would EVER
>>>>>>>>> give a client the advice to talk with the police, no matter how
>>>>>>>>> innocent you are. ALWAYS 'be afraid telling the TRUTH to anyone'!
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> PERJURY...think about it...Stupid...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Cops and prosecutors have the most unfortunate perverse practice of
>>>>>>>>> deliberately focusing on one individual and solely pursuing that
>>>>>>>>> individual. If there is any question in anyone's mind about this,
>>>>>>>>> look at how the college educated FBI agents relentlessly pursued
>>>>>>>>> Richard Jewel and Dr. Hatfield. These government agents are
>>>>>>>>> suffering from psychotic sickness.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Truthtelling will PREVENT this...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the advice from DasFox above should show anyone that
>>>>>>>>> his post should be authmatically deleted and left not read.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I talked myself out of a weed BUST by telling the truth...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Cop was impressed and not bothered...LIES would have BUSTED me...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> The advice from Nomen should be authmatically deleted and supplied by
>>>>>>>> the RIGHT...wingers...
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Which DasFox are we talking to anyway?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Why doesn't the real DasFox, if there is one, attach a PGP signature to his posts?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Like you...LOL...?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Talk Tech or STFU...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> THANKS
>>>>>
>>>>> Unlike you, I don't need half the ****ing free world to know who I am.
>>>>> Nobody cares who I am. Why would you?
>>>>
>>>> Dishonest post...put your PGP or STFU.
>>>>
>>>> THANKS
>>>
>>> I am anonymous.
>>>
>>> You are Paul Fox.

>>
>> No. Ca,per was wrong if so...PROOF IT...
>>
>>> I requested your PGP signature.
>>>
>>> You countered with a request.
>>>
>>> I defer to you. Ladies first, of course.

>>
>> Dishonest post...put YOUR PGP or STFU. Otherwise all ANONYMOUS are
>> SAME...

>
> That's the whole ****ing point, you moron.
>
> You can take your Wilders culture and stick it up your ***.
>
> You are absolutely one of the worst examples of an anonymous citizen
> I have ever seen.


WHO said I wanted to be anonymous...? ONLY YOU...

Dishonest post of a LIAR...TECH WINS...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

Reply With Quote
  #29 (permalink)  
Old 01-16-2011, 03:16 AM
Bryan
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

DasFox wrote:
> Bryan wrote:
> > James Duane, professor of law
> > and former defense attorney, advises different, at least in the U.S.

>
> >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc

>
> > If the link doesn't work, just Google up "don't talk to police".

>
> Dude, if you don't talk Truth to police, how can you use your rights
> to be silent...?
>
> Here's LAW...
>
> <http://jurist.org/paperchase/2010/06/supreme-court-holds-right-to-rem...>
>
> LAW says talk...


That's what you got out of Professor Duane's talk? You think he was
advising people not to say any words to invoke their Fifth Amendment
privilege? I'm at a loss to understand how you could have gotten that
so wrong. He even said he advised a former student, "Tell them you
will not talk to them without immunity".

> You snipped the part where I talked and got off being busted by
> police...
>
> Immature and unprofessional of you...
>
> THANKS


You tell not the truth. In my follow-up, I snipped two lines of your
post. The first was:

: Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...

And the second was:

: THANKS

And please, settle down about the memory-reading attack on a system
that happens to be running TrueCrypt.


--
--Bryan

Reply With Quote
  #30 (permalink)  
Old 01-16-2011, 04:38 AM
DasFox
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: TrueCrypt hack?

On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 20:16:25 -0800 (PST), Bryan wrote:

> DasFox wrote:
>> Bryan wrote:
>>> James Duane, professor of law
>>> and former defense attorney, advises different, at least in the U.S.

>>
>>>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc

>>
>>> If the link doesn't work, just Google up "don't talk to police".

>>
>> Dude, if you don't talk Truth to police, how can you use your rights
>> to be silent...?
>>
>> Here's LAW...
>>
>> <http://jurist.org/paperchase/2010/06/supreme-court-holds-right-to-rem...>
>>
>> LAW says talk...

>
> That's what you got out of Professor Duane's talk? You think he was
> advising people not to say any words to invoke their Fifth Amendment
> privilege? I'm at a loss to understand how you could have gotten that
> so wrong. He even said he advised a former student, "Tell them you
> will not talk to them without immunity".


The LAW says you have to TALK to get your right to NOT TALK but you
*snipped* that part of my response...

On purpose because it made you look WRONG...

Dishonest posting is for LIARS...

>> You snipped the part where I talked and got off being busted by
>> police...
>>
>> Immature and unprofessional of you...
>>
>> THANKS

>
> You tell not the truth. In my follow-up, I snipped two lines of your
> post. The first was:
>
>: Good advice BUT be prepared if Tech let's you down...
>
> And the second was:
>
>: THANKS


MORE LIES and everyone knows it...

> And please, settle down about the memory-reading attack on a system
> that happens to be running TrueCrypt.


TECH can be unsettling...LEARN THAT...

THANKS
--
Tech, computer repair specialist (on the side), part time Tech
Pro poster to Wilders Security...home base...On usenet to help noobs
Not me...

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