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You could encrypt it, but that would be another thing to do.
So we're only encrypting something small, one time, with the public key technology.
Having the data encrypted would make it very hard to find anything.
I'd really like to be able to encrypt the whole drive.
If the data is there for a reason it should be encrypted.
Anything important I simply encrypt myself, it's not exactly difficult to do.
While I'd love to see everything encrypted all the time, it actually is a very big deal.
It is never not encrypted when it's on the drive.
You're first of all getting your traffic encrypted, which is a really good thing.
And anyone who wants to can read it because the message itself was not encrypted.
There were, believe it or not, only a certain number of ways things could be encrypted, even with a computer.
But they know that before the next block is encrypted.
You need none of that in order for your drive to be encrypted.
But not if you're actually encrypting all the data that goes onto the drive.
So the computer always sees the data as if it's never been encrypted.
I can encrypt a message using your public key and send you the result.
As Mary points out, it's been encrypted, so why do we care?
This can be done by encrypting important data being sent on the network.
The public key can be known to everyone and is used for encrypting messages.
His eyebrows went up when he saw it was encrypted.
It encrypts all the information that is sent and received.
Then you use your private key to encrypt that random number.
I mean, there's no excuse for not having our data encrypted.
No, I guess it's encrypted by the time it gets there.
Can you just look at a file and say, oh, I know how this was encrypted?