>ironkey, and you'll get real hardware encryption as well. Perhaps, or perhaps they just XOR your data with your passwd like a certain tape maker did for their super hardware AES mil-spec encryption.
>rueCrypt developers are sneaky and don't accept contributions, They accept contributions, you can even take the source and fork it. The only thing you can't do is call your version with added rootkit "Truecrypt"…
99% of the market for smart phones, before the iPhone were corporate customers. We do care about what our users can install on OUR phones, we also don't want to only be able to install OUR software on OUR phones for OUR…
If you are distributing a proprietary bit of software you presumably have a method for counting how many copies you sold in order to know how many $ you should have. If you are giving it away then why not just use the…
>ironkey, and you'll get real hardware encryption as well. Perhaps, or perhaps they just XOR your data with your passwd like a certain tape maker did for their super hardware AES mil-spec encryption.
>rueCrypt developers are sneaky and don't accept contributions, They accept contributions, you can even take the source and fork it. The only thing you can't do is call your version with added rootkit "Truecrypt"…
99% of the market for smart phones, before the iPhone were corporate customers. We do care about what our users can install on OUR phones, we also don't want to only be able to install OUR software on OUR phones for OUR…
If you are distributing a proprietary bit of software you presumably have a method for counting how many copies you sold in order to know how many $ you should have. If you are giving it away then why not just use the…