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2008-02-06

TrueCrypt 5.0 Released

TrueCrypt 5.0 , a Free, Open-Source On-the-fly encryption tool came out this week.

Highlights from the release notes:
  • Mac OS X Support (Tiger and Leopard on both Intel and PPC architectures)
  • Windows performance enhancements
  • Pre-boot authentication and system drive encryption for Windows
  • Enhancements to the Linux version
This tool is fast becoming a favorite among security professionals, privacy advocates and the paranoid.

3 comments:

  1. I had trouble getting TrueCrypt to work properly on Mac OS Leopard (Intel). I reported the problem to TrueCrypt.

    After installing, it would fail to launch with a not supported on this architecture error. One reliable work-around I found was to delete the Info.plist file from /Applications/TrueCrypt.app/Contents/. This does not seem to cause any problems with TrueCrypt running as usual.

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  2. Someone on Digg suggested that if you're using it on a Case-Sensitive HFS+ filesystem, you need to rename
    /Applications/TrueCrypt.app/Contents/MacOS/TrueCrypt to /Applications/TrueCrypt.app/Contents/MacOS/truecrypt -- In other words, the actual binary within the app needs to be lowercase. That worked for me.

    I re-installed it and it broke again. I removed Info.plist and that also works. Strange.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I installed TrueCrypt on my laptop and ran some benchmark tests.

    Benchmark Results:
    http://www.full-disk-encryption.net/wiki/index.php/TrueCrypt#Benchmarks

    Pros:
    1) Easy to use product. Simple clean interface. Amazingly user-friendly!
    2) Free and Open Source
    3) Multiple Encryption and Hashing algorithm available.

    Cons:
    1) Buffered Read and Buffered Transfer Rate were almost halved after TrueCrypt FDE was enabled :-(.
    2) Access Time for large file (250+MB) increased by 11%.
    3) The initial encryption of the 120 GB HDD took 2 hours.

    ReplyDelete