FreeOTFE running on Windows XP |
|
Developer(s) | Sarah Dean |
Stable release | 5.21 / 7 February 2010 |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows and Windows Mobile |
Available in | English, Croatian, Czech, French, German, Greek, Italian, Spanish and Japanese |
Type | Disk encryption software |
License | Free and open-source software that requires attribution[1] |
Website | www.freeotfe.org |
FreeOTFE4PDA |
FreeOTFE is an open source on-the-fly disk encryption (OTFE) computer program for PCs running Microsoft Windows, and personal digital assistants (PDAs) running Windows Mobile (use FreeOTFE4PDA). It creates virtual drives, or disks, to which anything written is automatically encrypted before being stored on a computer's hard or USB drive. It is similar in function to other disk encryption programs including Microsoft's BitLocker.[2]
Contents |
FreeOTFE was initially released by Sarah Dean in 2004, and was the first open source code disk encryption system that provided a modular architecture allowing 3rd parties to implement additional algorithms if needed. Older FreeOTFE licensing required that any modification to the program be placed in the public domain. This does not conform technically to section 3 of the Open Source definition. Newer program licensing omits this condition.
This software is compatible with Linux encrypted volumes (e.g. LUKS, cryptoloop, dm-crypt), allowing data encrypted under Linux to be read (and written) freely. It was the first open source transparent disk encryption system to support Windows Vista and PDAs.[3][4][5][6]
Optional two-factor authentication using smart cards and/or hardware security modules (HSMs, also termed security tokens)[7] was introduced in v4.0, using the PKCS#11 (Cryptoki) standard developed by RSA Laboratories.
FreeOTFE also allows any number of "hidden volumes" to be created, giving plausible deniability and deniable encryption, and also has the option of encrypting full partitions or disks (but not the system partition).[8]
Unlike most disk encryption systems, FreeOTFE can be used in "portable mode", which allows it to be kept on a USB drive or other portable media, together with its encrypted data, and carried around. This allows it to be used under Microsoft Windows without installation of the complete program to "mount" and access the encrypted data through a virtual disk.
In common with other disk encryption systems which offer a "portable" (or "traveller") mode, the use of this mode requires installing device drivers (at least temporarily) to create virtual disks, and as a consequence administrator rights are needed to start this traveller mode. Like most open source software which uses device drivers the user must enable test signing when ran under Windows Vista x64 and Windows 7 x64 systems.[9]
The author of FreeOTFE also offers another program called "FreeOTFE Explorer"[10] which provides a driverless system that allows encrypted disks to be used without administrator rights.
This allows FreeOTFE encrypted data to be used on (for example) public computers found in libraries or computer kiosks (interactive kiosks), where administrator rights are unavailable.
Unlike FreeOTFE, FreeOTFE Explorer does not provide on-the-fly encryption through a virtual drive.[10] Instead it works in a similar manner as some archiving software in that it lets files be stored and extracted from encrypted disk images, in a similar manner as ZIP and RAR archives, by using a Windows Explorer interface.
Due to its architecture, FreeOTFE provides great flexibility to the user with its encryption options.
FreeOTFE implements several ciphers, including:
It includes all National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) finalists, and all ciphers can be used with multiple different keylengths.
FreeOTFE originally offered encryption using cipher-block chaining (CBC) with encrypted salt-sector initialization vector (ESSIV), though from v3.00 introduced LRW and also the more secure XTS mode, which supersedes LRW in the IEEE P1619 standard for disk encryption.
As with its cipher options, FreeOTFE offers many different hash algorithms: