I'm not a lawyer but I'd say it is FOSS. You can use and reuse the software subject to keeping sourcecode available and saying where you got it.
I've been using Truecrypt for many years on Mac + Windows + Linux without any issues. I never trusted the proprietary whole drive hardware encryption solutions. I want my data to be accessable where ever it is stored and not subject to some company choosing not to update the software for one of the platforms that I use. OK, Truecrypt isn't something that you can run/install through Macports but the solution works very well. If you use Truecrypt, you'll probably have to use FAT32 file system on your external drives. I know it isn't the best solution and it isn't FOSS but it is the only one that works with Mac/Win/Linux out of the box. Otherwise you will be looking for extensions for whichever FOSS filesystem you chose to use. There may well be something FOSS available on Linux as I think they have now implemented full disk encryption. I don't know what it is called but it may be something you could port over. I'd be a bit worried unless you can really do all the testing because if it isn't ported right your data will be gone forever. Let us know what you finally decide on doing. B. On 24.03.2012 10:00 , [email protected] wrote: > On Mar 23, 2012, at 1:41 PM, Sam Kuper wrote: > >> > On 23 March 2012 20:35, Adam Dershowitz <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >> Will truecrypt (http://www.truecrypt.org/) do what you need? >> > >> > TrueCrypt isn't FOSS. >> > > They claim it is on their web site. I see that the sourcecode is there, > although I haven't ready through all the details of their license. _______________________________________________ macports-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-users
