![]() ![]() Implement this securely, this would seem to provide a very solid and fast If you trust the hardware manufacturer to actually “security password”, the configuration of which is overloaded on the ATA The encryption key can optionally be encrypted using a 32-byte You don’t need to erase every flash block, which is very bad for durability You just need to overwrite the encryption key with a new random one. One of the reasons for this is that to securely wipe the drive now The encryption key used is stored in nonvolatile memory Modern SSDs (at least the ones made by Intel, Samsung) always encrypt all Filed under: English, Technology, Security, Lenovo ThinkPad.
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