
Traveling overseas? You'll need a visa and might need to disable your computer's encryption
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The article itself is about the precautions that organizations take when sending their staff across to these countries. In essence they give them a clean laptop expressly to that end of travelling to these countries. They put them on a separate remote access network when they are using remote access to communicate back whilst travelling within these countries. The organizations assume that the computers will be compromised while travel and wipe the devices completely when the staff return to their point of origin.
I'm wondering when the "no encryption" policy will become standard for all countries. I imagine the argument for it will be something about "protecting the borders from certain types of pornography" - nevertheless it truly simplifies the process of customs installing keyloggers on your laptop if they don't have to worry about BitLocker protecting the boot environment. With the rumors of BitLocker on Windows Phone 8 swirling around, like as not the same policy will start to apply to phones as so then.
The first rule of travelling with sensitive data probably should be "don't". If you must, there's no reason why you can't store an encrypted file somewhere in the cloud and keep the decryption key in a separate cloud. From the NYT article it sounds as although big business is taking the sort of approach you'd expect the characters in a Neal Stephenson novel to adopt. The precautions as well doesn't sound too crazy, even though it's always hard to tell the line between reasonable precaution and overt paranoia when it comes to computer security.
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