On Jan 3, 2012, at 5:59 PM, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
> 
> In filevault, you have whole disk encryption, and in time machine, you have
> backup disk encryption too.

Time Machine does no encryption whatsoever.

FileVault encrypts home directories in disk images similar to TrueCrypt 
container files.  These are dumped as-are to Time Machine volumes so these at 
least are encrypted.  This is why Apple created the sparsebundle, because 
sparseimages were clobbering Time Machine in 10.4.  In 10.5, only the changed 
bands within the sparsebundle are dumped.  These disk images are troublesome to 
restore: either you restore the entire disk image or you mount the image and 
pluck out files by hand.

FileVault 2 is WDE.  FileVault 2 can be used to encrypt entire Time Machine 
volumes.  But this means decrypting on reads from the source volume and 
recrypting on the target volume.

All exactly as I wrote.

--Rich P.

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