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Merely Cloaking Data May Be Incriminating?

n0g writes "In a recent submission to Bugtraq, Larry Gill of Guidance Software refutes some bug reports for the forensic analysis product EnCase Forensic Edition. The refutation is interesting, but one comment raises an important privacy issue. When talking about users creating loops in NTFS directories to hide data, Gill says, 'The purposeful hiding of data by the subject of an investigation is in itself important evidence and there are many scenarios where intentional data cloaking provides incriminating evidence, even if the perpetrator is successful in cloaking the data itself.' That begs the question: if one cloaks data by encrypting it, exactly what incriminating evidence does that provide? And how important is that evidence compared to the absence of anything else found that was incriminating? Are we no longer allowed to have any secrets, even on our own systems?"

5 of 418 comments (clear)

  1. But Comrade... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Funny

    If you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear!

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  2. Re:Other types of cloaking... by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Funny

    No, they're just cloaking the replies.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  3. Encrypt random noise. Lose the keys. by MikeFM · · Score: 4, Funny

    I encrypt everything just so if they ever investigate me, for whatever stupid reason they might decide to, they can demand the key and I can refuse. It's the principal of the thing. Why should we give up our privacy? What if I just want to encrpyt files by a random one time key and then erase the key? Maybe that constitutes digital art to me.

    I encourage everyone to generate files containing nothing but random noise, encrypt those files, and throw away the key. If everyone does this then they can't tell what is a real encrypted file and what isn't. For good measure email some of these random files back and forth with suspicious subject lines.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  4. Re:Why even ask? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hey, *I* didn't encrypt my data. I just performed a reversible transformation on it. It's not my fault if you're a fuckin' slowpoke at factoring large prime numbers!

  5. It works like this... by ignavus · · Score: 4, Funny

    It works like this...

    The government, being a public institution, has to keep everything it does private. That's why you are not allowed to see their secret files.

    But a citizen, being a private individual, has to keep everything they do public. That's why the government must be able to see your secret files.

    Got it?

    --
    I am anarch of all I survey.