On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 11:15:32AM +0100, The Gluglug wrote: > It's more about redundancy than security. Not putting ones eggs in the > same basket, and so on. I also recommend keeping lots of good backups, > in separate locations. (encrypted, of course, and to a server that is > under your exclusive control)
Ok. I had not redundancy in mind; rather security. But redundancy is very important too. If I may make a suggestion, a tutorial on how to set up a libreboot + GNU/Linux server (even a basic one) would be most useful. I have one, but I must get rid of it since it is not able to run libreboot: I have plans to do this, but I did not yet figure out how you achieved to set one up. > There are some people who would want to abolish this law, but I'd have > none of that. At the moment, there is no limit. Quite so. > > Already done. But what if someone spies on me typing my > > passphrase, even if it is on my second dummy libreboot system? > > > > LUKS passphrases can be changed, without having to reconfigure > anything else. (as far as I know) I think so: at least, I have changed mine without having to reconfigure anything else.
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