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Seagate to ship self-encrypting hard drives

Enterprise security
Thu Sep 24 2009, 14:38

Seagate has released several new hard drives that feature self-encryption as standard.

The company said that it would be equipping its new Savvio, Constellation and Cheetah lines with the ability to automatically encrypt their contents. The drives will primarily target the enterprise server space.

The new drives will encrypt data prior to being written on the platter, then decrypt prior to reading the stored contents, allowing the data to remain encrypted when data is at rest or when the drives themselves are physically removed from the system.

Seagate said that the encryption techniques and formats are supported by the Trusted Computing Group and should also support Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers standards for key management. The drives will also support new 6Gbps server boards.

Initially, the company said that it hopes to aim the device at industries with heavy compliance standards, such as medical care facilities and financial institutions. A recent study suggested that many companies are still struggling to find adequate security management systems for stored data.

The release of the new server drives comes just one day after Seagate announced news in the desktop space. The company said that its latest line of Serial ATA III drives would perform at speeds of up to 6Gbps. µ

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Comments
Encryption FEVER, BringsOut Dough....

Doh, they knew ALl along. Encryption that is Proprietary might work Many Need That Much, yet ALL security, Copyright & Encryption Stuff just Makes Your Signal Cost & Cost some more. Now Cable Wants to Encrypt ALL Cahnnels. Why, So You'll PAY for Your FREE signal.

When anything is FREE & Out In Open, Its gonna Get Stolen, somehow, theives Then Happily Reselling DATA Back to Consumer Again & Again. Its Same OLD Story. Yet, WithOut encryption, Your DATA Look Like Jackals of World Having convention.

DRASHEK

posted by : K Bul...., 25 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Huh?

They've been doing this for at least seven years! During that time I've had several Seagate drives go into the self-encryption mode spontaneously and let me tell you the data is mega protected.

So protected that Seagate replaced all but one of the self-encrypting drives for me free of charge.

posted by : Doug Glass, 24 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Too much bspd

Gbps - crap!

posted by : inq.no.edu, 24 September 2009 Complain about this comment
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