| Scouter and rattyvulcan are right. What it boils down to is that you basically have to define a certain level of risk as acceptable. Ultimately, if I have physical access to the machine, with enough time and effort I can harvest everything. Gauge potential users' abilities against your own tolerance for security measures. For example, if I want to block my roommate from accessing the machine, I would probably set a BIOS password as well as a windows password. Unless my roommate is a hacker, and then I would probably go for a new roommate. ha ha. There are also USB dongles you can get that will "lock" your computer. Or, you can change your paradigm and instead of stopping someone from using the computer, stop them from getting your data. In that case encryption is your best bet. PGP is good, or Windows XP has built in encryption mechanisms, but be sure you understand how they work before employing them. A skilled hacker could still potentially get at the information.
Any other suggestions, or should we drop it until ralonzo7 replies?
- Slog |