panickySalt7

joined 1 year ago
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/1840209

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/1840134

This is a changeset adding encryption to btrfs. It is not complete; it
does not support inline data or verity or authenticated encryption. It
is primarily intended as a proof that the fscrypt extent encryption
changeset it builds on work. 

As per the design doc refined in the fall of last year [1], btrfs
encryption has several steps: first, adding extent encryption to fscrypt
and then btrfs; second, adding authenticated encryption support to the
block layer, fscrypt, and then btrfs; and later adding potentially the
ability to change the key used by a directory (either for all data or
just newly written data) and/or allowing use of inline extents and
verity items in combination with encryption and/or enabling send/receive
of encrypted volumes. As such, this change is only the first step and is
unsafe.

This change does not pass a couple of encryption xfstests, because of
different properties of extent encryption. It hasn't been tested with
direct IO or RAID. Because currently extent encryption always uses inline
encryption (i.e. IO-block-only) for data encryption, it does not support
encryption of inline extents; similarly, since btrfs stores verity items
in the tree instead of in inline encryptable blocks on disk as other
filesystems do, btrfs cannot currently encrypt verity items. Finally,
this is insecure; the checksums are calculated on the unencrypted data
and stored unencrypted, which is a potential information leak. (This
will be addressed by authenticated encryption).

This changeset is built on two prior changesets to fscrypt: [2] and [3]
and should have no effect on unencrypted usage.

[1] https://docs.google.com/document/d/1janjxewlewtVPqctkWOjSa7OhCgB8Gdx7iDaCDQQNZA/edit?usp=sharing
[2]
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fscrypt/[email protected]/
[3]
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fscrypt/[email protected]
 

cross-posted from: https://latte.isnot.coffee/post/256982

A discovered vulnerability for privilage escalation https://thehackernews.com/2023/07/researchers-uncover-new-linux-kernel.html?m=1

If system security is the most important criteria above everything else, switch to using BSD.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.run/post/32118

India's Sachin Meena and Pakistan's Seema Haider are looking to start a new chapter as they walk out of prison in New Delhi on a rain-soaked day after getting bail.

Seema was arrested on July 4 for illegally entering India without a visa via Nepal with her four children, all aged below seven years, while Sachin was put behind bars for sheltering the illegal immigrants.

"My husband is a Hindu, so I am a Hindu. I feel I am an Indian now," Seema told NDTV.

The couple's love story is as intriguing as a Bollywood movie. They got in touch during the Covid pandemic while playing the online game PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG).

They fell in love on the app, which led to Seema, 30, and Sachin, 25, getting married in Nepal in March this year. This was their first meeting.

"It was such a long and gruelling journey. I was very scared too. I first went from Karachi to Dubai, where we waited for 11 hours and couldn't sleep. We then flew to Nepal, before finally taking the road to Pokhara, where I met Sachin," Seema says.

She then went back to Pakistan and Sachin returned to India. Back home, Seema, who claimed discord with her husband, sold a plot for Pakistani rupees 12 lakh and arranged flight tickets and a Nepal visa for herself and her four children.

In May she reached Nepal via Dubai and spent some time in the tourist city of Pokhara in the Himalayan nation. Then she took a bus for Delhi from Kathmandu and reached Greater Noida on May 13 with her children where Sachin had made arrangements for her to stay in a rented accommodation without disclosing her Pakistani identity, officials said.

The cross-border love story hit a dead-end as they were arrested on July 4 and put in jail. While Seema was charged with illegally entering India, Sachin was booked for sheltering the illegal immigrant.

Yesterday, Seema was granted bail and will now focus on the paperwork to make her move to India official.

Talking about her release, Seema says, "I shouted in joy when I heard the news. I had thought that I would be in jail for months."

In a video message from Saudi Arabia, Seema's husband Ghulam Haider urged the Indian government to help him reunite with his wife. However, Seema told reporters that she did not wish to go back to Ghulam Haider and claimed a threat to her life if she returns to Pakistan.

 

India's Sachin Meena and Pakistan's Seema Haider are looking to start a new chapter as they walk out of prison in New Delhi on a rain-soaked day after getting bail.

Seema was arrested on July 4 for illegally entering India without a visa via Nepal with her four children, all aged below seven years, while Sachin was put behind bars for sheltering the illegal immigrants.

"My husband is a Hindu, so I am a Hindu. I feel I am an Indian now," Seema told NDTV.

The couple's love story is as intriguing as a Bollywood movie. They got in touch during the Covid pandemic while playing the online game PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG).

They fell in love on the app, which led to Seema, 30, and Sachin, 25, getting married in Nepal in March this year. This was their first meeting.

"It was such a long and gruelling journey. I was very scared too. I first went from Karachi to Dubai, where we waited for 11 hours and couldn't sleep. We then flew to Nepal, before finally taking the road to Pokhara, where I met Sachin," Seema says.

She then went back to Pakistan and Sachin returned to India. Back home, Seema, who claimed discord with her husband, sold a plot for Pakistani rupees 12 lakh and arranged flight tickets and a Nepal visa for herself and her four children.

In May she reached Nepal via Dubai and spent some time in the tourist city of Pokhara in the Himalayan nation. Then she took a bus for Delhi from Kathmandu and reached Greater Noida on May 13 with her children where Sachin had made arrangements for her to stay in a rented accommodation without disclosing her Pakistani identity, officials said.

The cross-border love story hit a dead-end as they were arrested on July 4 and put in jail. While Seema was charged with illegally entering India, Sachin was booked for sheltering the illegal immigrant.

Yesterday, Seema was granted bail and will now focus on the paperwork to make her move to India official.

Talking about her release, Seema says, "I shouted in joy when I heard the news. I had thought that I would be in jail for months."

In a video message from Saudi Arabia, Seema's husband Ghulam Haider urged the Indian government to help him reunite with his wife. However, Seema told reporters that she did not wish to go back to Ghulam Haider and claimed a threat to her life if she returns to Pakistan.

 

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