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KaKa Private Disk 3.50 Software Patch: How to Create and Protect Virtual Disks



Private Disk, an easy-to-use software to protect sensitive data on notebooks, personal computers, removable and flash disk. It is used for creating virtual disks on your computer. On this disk you can store confidential information which youd like to keep secret from other users. You only need to save files into this private disk and close them after that, then the program will protect the files automatically.




KaKa Private Disk 3.50 Software Patch



Here are some key features of "Private Disk":- Simple and efficient: You will learn how to use it in just seconds because of its' extremely attractive and user-friendly interface!- Countless Private Disks: You could create countless private disk as you wish.- Variable Size Disk Drives: No need to specify a disk size, the private disk size will grow and shrink depending on its usage.- Hot-Keys: You can use Hot-Keys to easy open/close the disks List. This provides a greater flexibility in using Private Disk.- Drive Firewall: Allows you to protect your data from virus and other bad software.- Password Protected: Allows you to set a login password and each private disk manage password for different people to use.


I use GnuPG to compute cryptographic signatures for my emails, git commits/tags, and software release artifacts (tarballs). Part of GnuPG is gpg-agent which talks to OpenSSH, which I login to remote servers and to clone git repositories. I dislike storing cryptographic keys on general-purpose machines, and have used hardware-backed OpenPGP keys since around 2006 when I got a FSFE Fellowship Card. GnuPG via gpg-agent handles this well, and the private key never leaves the hardware. The ZeitControl cards were (to my knowledge) proprietary hardware running some non-free operating system and OpenPGP implementation. By late 2012 the YubiKey NEO supported OpenPGP, and while the hardware and operating system on it was not free, at least it ran a free software OpenPGP implementation and eventually I setup my primary RSA key on it. This worked well for a couple of years, and when I in 2019 wished to migrate to a new key, the FST-01G device with open hardware running free software that supported Ed25519 had become available. I created a key and have been using the FST-01G on my main laptop since then. This little device has been working, the signature counter on it is around 14501 which means around 10 signatures/day since then!


I have several backup servers that run the excellent rsnapshot software, which uses Secure Shell (SSH) for remote access. The SSH private key of the backup server can be a weak link in the overall security. To see how it can be a problem, consider if someone breaks into your backup server and manages to copy your SSH private key, they will now have the ability to login to all machines that you take backups off (and that should be all of your machines, right?).


The traditional way to mitigate SSH private key theft is by password protecting the private key. This works poorly in an unattended server environment because either the decryption password needs to be stored in disk (where the attacker can read it) or the decrypted private key has to be available in decrypted form in memory (where attacker can read it). 2ff7e9595c


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