Laptop prep for Police State Travel
Mstation general News
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Thu, 15 May 2008
By Bruce Schneier
The Guardian
May 15 2008
Last month a US court ruled that border agents can search your laptop,
or any other electronic device, when you're entering the country. They
can take your computer and download its entire contents, or keep it for
several days. Customs and Border Patrol has not published any rules
regarding this practice, and I and others have written a letter to
Congress urging it to investigate and regulate this practice.
But the US is not alone. British customs agents search laptops for
pornography. And there are reports on the internet of this sort of thing
happening at other borders, too. You might not like it, but it's a fact.
So how do you protect yourself?
Encrypting your entire hard drive, something you should certainly do for
security in case your computer is lost or stolen, won't work here. The
border agent is likely to start this whole process with a "please type
in your password". Of course you can refuse, but the agent can search
you further, detain you longer, refuse you entry into the country and
otherwise ruin your day.
You're going to have to hide your data. Set a portion of your hard drive
to be encrypted with a different key - even if you also encrypt your
entire hard drive - and keep your sensitive data there. Lots of programs
allow you to do this. I use PGP Disk (from pgp.com). TrueCrypt
(truecrypt.org) is also good, and free.
While customs agents might poke around on your laptop, they're unlikely
to find the encrypted partition. (You can make the icon invisible, for
some added protection.) And if they download the contents of your hard
drive to examine later, you won't care.
Be sure to choose a strong encryption password. Details are too
complicated for a quick tip, but basically anything easy to remember is
easy to guess. (My advice is at tinyurl.com/4f8z4n.) Unfortunately, this
isn't a perfect solution. Your computer might have left a copy of the
password on the disk somewhere, and (as I also describe at the above
link) smart forensic software will find it.
So your best defence is to clean up your laptop. A customs agent can't
read what you don't have. You don't need five years' worth of email and
client data. You don't need your old love letters and those photos (you
know the ones I'm talking about). Delete everything you don't absolutely
need. And use a secure file erasure program to do it. While you're at
it, delete your browser's cookies, cache and browsing history. It's
nobody's business what websites you've visited. And turn your computer
off - don't just put it to sleep - before you go through customs; that
deletes other things. Think of all this as the last thing to do before
you stow your electronic devices for landing. Some companies now give
their employees forensically clean laptops for travel, and have them
download any sensitive data over a virtual private network once they've
entered the country. They send any work back the same way, and delete
everything again before crossing the border to go home. This is a good
idea if you can do it.
If you can't, consider putting your sensitive data on a USB drive or
even a camera memory card: even 16GB cards are reasonably priced these
days. Encrypt it, of course, because it's easy to lose something that
small. Slip it in your pocket, and it's likely to remain unnoticed even
if the customs agent pokes through your laptop. If someone does discover
it, you can try saying: "I don't know what's on there. My boss told me
to give it to the head of the New York office." If you've chosen a
strong encryption password, you won't care if he confiscates it.
Lastly, don't forget your phone and PDA. Customs agents can search those
too: emails, your phone book, your calendar. Unfortunately, there's
nothing you can do here except delete things.
I know this all sounds like work, and that it's easier to just ignore
everything here and hope you don't get searched. Today, the odds are in
your favour. But new forensic tools are making automatic searches easier
and easier, and the recent US court ruling is likely to embolden other
countries. It's better to be safe than sorry.
Bruce Schneier is a security technologist and author: schneier.com/blog
(via Infosec)