Re: Password
On Mar 24, 11:46 am, pete <b...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Is it Possible to protect a folder by the use of a Password.
Thanks in advance.
Pete
Pete,
Do you have to have the ENTIRE folder blocked (as in no directory
listing), or could you live with just protecting all the individual
files with a password? If you could go with the latter, I highly
recommend AxCrypt. I just used this program for a medium sized
business's backup for security. It works extremely well. Here's a
link:
http://www.axantum.com/AxCrypt/ Go see what you think.
</jordan>
.
Relevant Pages
- REVIEW: "The Information Security Dictionary", Urs E. Gattiker
... "The Information Security Dictionary", Urs E. Gattiker, 2004, ... %T "The Information Security Dictionary" ... The entry for Authentication does not list the ... listing is given for trade secrets or trade marks. ... (comp.security.misc) - REVIEW: "The Information Security Dictionary", Urs E. Gattiker
... "The Information Security Dictionary", Urs E. Gattiker, 2004, ... %T "The Information Security Dictionary" ... The entry for Authentication does not list the ... listing is given for trade secrets or trade marks. ... (alt.computer.security) - REVIEW: "Access Denied", Cathy Cronkhite/Jack McCullough
... The Complete Guide to Protecting Your Business ... divide security breakers into various camps, ... (comp.security.misc) - Re: disagree with a few things in perlsec
... > I disagree with a few things in perlsec relating to "Protecting your ... > First of all, however, you can't take away read permission, because the ... > Some people mistakenly regard this as a security problem. ... > perlsec makes it sounds like it has no effect on protecting it. ... (comp.lang.perl.misc) - Re: mmap_min_addr and your local LSM (ok, just SELinux)
... protecting most people? ... Yes SELinux is stronger in some areas than ... The LSM module didn't create that vulnerability directly, ... The security policy writer should have a guarantee that the worst mistake ... (Linux-Kernel) |
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