Educause Security Discussion mailing list archives
Re: Laptop encryption
From: Chris Vakhordjian <chrisv () MAIL UCF EDU>
Date: Tue, 9 Oct 2007 09:02:26 -0400
I will participate. Thank you, -----Original Message----- From: Sarah Stevens [mailto:sarah () STEVENS-TECHNOLOGIES COM] Sent: Friday, October 05, 2007 7:06 PM To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU Subject: Re: [SECURITY] Laptop encryption If there is interest, I would be willing to set up the telecon bridge. We have an inside bridge. No fee for anyone who wants to take part. Sarah Stevens Stevens Technologies -------------------------- Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld ----- Original Message ----- From: Paul Keser <pkeser () STANFORD EDU> To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU <SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU> Sent: Fri Oct 05 17:00:40 2007 Subject: Re: [SECURITY] Laptop encryption -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 There seems to be a lot of interest on the list. Do you guys want to setup a conf call? I haven't done that before but I can look into it if you are interested. I am in PST. - -PaulK Paul Keser Assoc. Information Security Officer Stanford University 650.724.9051 GPG Fingerprint: DBA3 E20F CE91 28AA DA1C 4A77 3BD9 C82D 2699 24FB Harold Winshel wrote:
Dennis, Will do. What days and times are good for you? What time zone are you? Harold At 05:33 PM 10/5/2007, you wrote:Hi Harold, I would love to learn more about the research you are & have done. If possible can I give you a call next week? thanks Dennis. Harold Winshel wrote:I work for a decentralized academic unit but we've been looking at a number of enryption utilities the past year. Some we've been using on a light scale - other's we're still evaluating. I'd put them into two classes - full disk and file / folder. I'd also categorize them in another way: free, inexpensive (under $60 / license) or expensive (above $60 / license). Of course, with volume purchases there can be big discounts available. One program that we liked a lot was a free program called Truecrypt. Besides being free, it is pretty easy to use and can be used on different media (hard drives, CD's, etc.). It's not full disk, which can be a concern but, for a quick way of encrypting something, it works. We've looked at some higher end products - both file / folder and full disk, and are leaning toward the full disk. I'd be glad to give you more details if you're interested because we've spent a lot of time doing research on different products. Harold At 04:53 PM 10/4/2007, Dennis Tracz wrote:Hello all, I am new to this list so please forgive me if this topic has already been covered. I am interested in knowing, what is the common practice for Laptop encryption, specifically: 1. What is your current practice: a. Do you use encryption on laptops (for laptops you administer) b. Do you encrypt the entire hard drive or selected folders i.e.( My Documents) c. Do you use a commercial product or EFS e. If encryption is used is it automatically configured (for laptops you administer) or do users have a choice 2. What is your desired practice if you do not use encryption on laptops a. Is this something you are wanting, attempting or not wishing to do? b. Would you encrypt the entire hard drive or selected folders i.e.( My Documents) c. Would you use a commercial product or EFS? d. Would you automatically encrypt (for laptops you administer) or would you let your users have a choice? Any insight is greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance -- Dennis N. Tracz CISSP-ISSMP, CISM Information Security Officer University of Calgary (403) 220-4010Harold Winshel Computing and Instructional Technologies Faculty of Arts & Sciences Rutgers University, Camden Campus 311 N. 5th Street, Room B10 Armitage Hall Camden NJ 08102 (856) 225-6669 (O)-- Dennis N. Tracz CISSP-ISSMP, CISM Information Security Officer University of Calgary (403) 220-4010Harold Winshel Computing and Instructional Technologies Faculty of Arts & Sciences Rutgers University, Camden Campus 311 N. 5th Street, Room B10 Armitage Hall Camden NJ 08102 (856) 225-6669 (O)
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org <http://enigmail.mozdev.org/> iD8DBQFHBtAoO9nILSaZJPsRAjMaAJ9jKQ1UvjtcW3UeZwShT3gE7hXDZgCfR8n8 u1PelSm0uHGZFma0+7MYt14= =hBTt -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Chris Vakhordjian Information Security Officer UCF Computer Services & Telecommunications www.infosec.ucf.edu chrisv () mail ucf edu
Current thread:
- Re: Laptop encryption, (continued)
- Re: Laptop encryption David Kovarik (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Brewer, Alex D (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Scott Koger (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Dave Koontz (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Allan Williams (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Greg Vickers (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Sarah Stevens (Oct 08)
- Re: Laptop encryption Todd Clementz (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Hoffman, Michael (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Gary Dobbins (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Chris Vakhordjian (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Scott Koger (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Anthony Maszeroski (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Alex Everett (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Linda Pruss (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Dennis Tracz (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Brian Goodman (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Progar, Joe J (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Christopher Penido (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Cavender, Terry (Oct 09)
- Re: Laptop encryption Taylor, James R (Oct 09)
(Thread continues...)