This is kind of a late answer due to iCloud suddenly thinking that the MacGroup 
email was spam.

> On Apr 12, 2019, at 16:46, Harry Jacobson-Beyer <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Why don’t you use DropBox or some other cloud storage for your stuff? Save 
> the encrypted files to the cloud?

I'm distrustful enough of institutions that can be bought and sold that I want 
as little of my stuff as possible floating around outside my house. Not that 
anyone would give two whatevers about my stuff in particular... Oh, and I'm 
also cheap, so since I have the hardware to keep things backed up in house, I 
don't feel the urge to rent a virtual storage unit.

Not that this is a bad idea... I just have severe doubts about security.

Bill


> 
>> On Apr 12, 2019, at 11:05 AM, Bill Rising <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> I use my laptop for both work and home. Because my work stuff must be hidden 
>> from prying eyes, I put all my work stuff on some encrypted disk images 
>> which I eject at the end of the work day.
>> 
>> The bad thing about encrypted disk images is that they have a size, and so 
>> they run out of space periodically as I add more and more stuff.
>> 
>> Enter APFS: it would seem that I could switch to using encrypted APFS 
>> volumes instead of the disk images. The big advantage to this is that they 
>> share space with everything else on my internal drive, so that they have no 
>> artificial size limit (other than that of the internal drive as a whole). I 
>> could then unmount the APFS volumes at the end of the work day. Aside from 
>> seeming a little clumsier (gotta mount the volumes from Disk Utility instead 
>> of from Finder), this looks to be theoretically OK.
>> 
>> I don't know if it is empirically OK, however, which is kinda important.
>> 
>> I tried googling but only found various bits of information on each of the 
>> two ways of storing things, but no arguments saying whether one should be 
>> favored over the other.
>> 
>> Does switching from encrypted sparsebundle images to encrypted APFS volumes 
>> seem like a good thing to do, or does it seem dopey? Does using APFS volumes 
>> affect how backups work? Is there any increased danger that 
>> absent-mindedness could destroy large chunks of data? 
>> 
>> Thanks for any practical experience advice.
>> 
>> Bill
>> 
>> 
>> 
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