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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: September 25th, 2023

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  • The decryption key is more than 20 random character, so if you get only half of it is not a biggie and it doesn’t look like anything interesting.

    It is on the internet mostly because I don’t have anything else to host it locally. But I see some benefit: I wanted for the server to be available immediately after a power failure. If it fetches the key from internet I just need for the router to be online, if it fetches it from the local network I need another server running unencrypted disk.



  • Second reason. It may run your vpn, with the server down you cannot connect to it and provide the decryption key unless you are connected to the same network.

    There are some good answer around where the server can easily decrypt automatically as long as it is connected in your home but will likely fail at a thief’s home. These are a much safer setup than keeping data unencrypted even if they are not bullet proof.



  • I’ve configured something similar. The /boot partition is the only unencrypted. In the initramfs there is a script that downloads half of the decryption key from http, while the other half is stored in the script itself. The script implements automated retry until it can fetch the key and decrypt the root partition.

    My attack model here is that, as soon as I realize someone stole my NAS I can shutdown the server hosting half of the decryption key making my data safe. There is a window where the attacker could connect it to a network and decrypt the data, but it is made more difficult by the static network configuration: they should have a default gateway with the same IP address of mine.

    On my TODO list I also have to implement some sort of notification to get an alert when the decryption key is fetched from internet.


  • They also says that installing a different os will invalidate the warranty. But their x86 models (I wasn’t aware of the arm) literally ship with a USB drive connected to an internal USB port which starts the setup of their custom Linux if it detects no OS on the internal drives. You just swap that pendrive and you install whatever you want. I cannot say it works for all the models, but I did a little research before buying mine and I can say it run debian for more that one year without any compatibility issue.