I'm in the process of ordering a batch of Lok-It flash drives for my department, and in addition to that I was curious if adding TrueCrypt to each drive was also a good idea.
I won't pretend that I'm responsible for a fortune 500 company, or that we stand to lose billions from information leaks, however even though it wouldn't be so significant it would still be a loss of revenue should certain files be unsecured if the drives were lost or stolen.
From what I've seen so far of the Lok-It drives I'm fairly confident in their ability to keep things secure. They won't be compromised by software based attacks due to it not even being accessible by a computer until it's decrypted, and brute force attacks are out of the question because 10 wrong PIN numbers and all the data is erased. The case also seems to be able to help protect against outside tampering with the epoxy covering the memory modules.
I'm no security expert though, far from it. Which is why I've come to you for a second opinion: Is adding TrueCrypt software to the already hardware encrypted drives a smart additional layer of security, or just an unnecessarily redundant hassle?
I won't pretend that I'm responsible for a fortune 500 company, or that we stand to lose billions from information leaks, however even though it wouldn't be so significant it would still be a loss of revenue should certain files be unsecured if the drives were lost or stolen.
From what I've seen so far of the Lok-It drives I'm fairly confident in their ability to keep things secure. They won't be compromised by software based attacks due to it not even being accessible by a computer until it's decrypted, and brute force attacks are out of the question because 10 wrong PIN numbers and all the data is erased. The case also seems to be able to help protect against outside tampering with the epoxy covering the memory modules.
I'm no security expert though, far from it. Which is why I've come to you for a second opinion: Is adding TrueCrypt software to the already hardware encrypted drives a smart additional layer of security, or just an unnecessarily redundant hassle?