**** BEGIN LOGGING AT Fri Jan 11 02:59:57 2019 Jan 11 10:19:48 Anyone know if there is a browser (any one, dont care which) that can display https://www.kmart.com.au/product/lego-city-police-sky-police-diamond-heist---60209/2382885 on the N900? Jan 11 10:38:29 jonwil: I con only list browsers that didn't display that page Jan 11 10:40:28 i guess he didnt like that answer Jan 11 10:40:30 :) Jan 11 10:42:45 seems likely :p Jan 11 16:20:59 sixwheeledbeast^: wasn't the "SD" in "SecureDigital" cards exactly about hw encryption, just that nobody really is using that feature, except of some windows smartphones afaik Jan 11 16:23:46 Secure Digital is just the name for the format standard AFAIK? Jan 11 16:25:16 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SD_Association Jan 11 16:25:25 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Digital#Card_security "card password" Jan 11 16:26:12 >>Cards can protect their contents from erasure or modification, prevent access by non-authorized users, and protect copyrighted content using digital rights management.<< Jan 11 16:26:36 Password locked but not encrypted data Jan 11 16:28:28 there's no info how it's implemented on flash level, I think the controller encrypts data with the password Jan 11 16:34:35 anyway what is the semantics of "encrypted" anyway? As long as you can't even read the data. any encryption of that data is "Schroedinger's cat" Jan 11 16:35:23 LUKS was easy to setup with disks. Still not checked compatibility with other devices or OS. If it's not viable I am thinking I will go the flash sticks with a pin on them. More expensive but seems to tick all the boxes. Jan 11 16:37:11 quite a few of those "encrypted" sticks were complete fake Jan 11 16:37:37 check carefully if the one you want to get seen some audit Jan 11 16:38:37 Yep either this https://istorage-uk.com/product/datashur-pro/ or the lower rated Corsair Secure 3 Jan 11 16:39:19 Flash chips are coated in resin on the above. Jan 11 16:55:51 I seem to recall one of the supposedly encrypted flash sticks simply came with a windows driver that encoded data on PC, and of course it had the PIN in plaintext in the executable data loaded from stick into PC Jan 11 16:56:47 IOW "cracking" that "encrypted storage" was a homework task for 1st semester CS students Jan 11 16:57:19 that would be software based Jan 11 16:57:45 oh i think i see Jan 11 16:57:54 well, the package printing is tolerant Jan 11 16:57:57 I read that wrong :nod: Jan 11 16:58:39 it been advertised as "encrypting storage" - didmn't mention it does the encryption on PC's CPU Jan 11 17:01:41 the one you linked above looks good at first flance **** ENDING LOGGING AT Sat Jan 12 02:59:57 2019