On Tue, 2024-05-14 at 16:38 +0100, Ignat Korchagin wrote: > On Tue, May 14, 2024 at 4:30 PM James Bottomley > <James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Tue, 2024-05-14 at 14:11 +0100, Ignat Korchagin wrote: > > > * if someone steals one of the disks - we don't want them to > > > see it has encrypted data (no LUKS header) > > > > What is the use case that makes this important? In usual operation > > over the network, the fact that we're setting up encryption is > > easily identifiable to any packet sniffer (DHE key exchanges are > > fairly easy to fingerprint), but security relies on the fact that > > even knowing that we're setting up encryption, the attacker can't > > gain access to it. The fact that we are setting up encryption > > isn't seen as a useful thing to conceal, so why is it important for > > your encrypted disk use case? > > In some "jurisdictions" authorities can demand that you decrypt the > data for them for "reasons". On the other hand if they can't prove > there is a ciphertext in the first place - it makes their case > harder. Well, this isn't necessarily a good assumption: the way to detect an encrypted disk is to look at the entropy of the device blocks. If the disk is encrypted, the entropy will be pretty much maximal unlike every other use case. The other thing is that if the authorities have your TPM, they already have access to the disk in this derived key scenario. If *you* still have access to your TPM, you can update the storage seed to shred the data. James