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Seagate ships self-encrypting laptop drives

Seagate ships self-encrypting laptop drives

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 09 Nov 2008 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

The company says unlike software-based encryption methods, its self-encrypting hard drives can be easily utilized with no learning curve. IDC Canada analyst David Senf weighs in

Seagate Technology LLC is now shipping two new self-encrypting laptop hard drives to laptop manufacturers. But according to one analyst, IT managers shouldn’t solely rely on full-disk encryption measures to keep their data secure.

The new 320GB Momentus FDE (full-disk encryption) laptop drives are now available in 5,400-rpm and 7,200-rpm models, with the 500GB model shipping early next year. Seagate has chosen Dell Inc. to be the first company to ship the new self-encrypting drives. They will be available on Dell’s E-Series line of Latitude notebooks.

Seagate also announced a partnership with McAfee Inc. which will allow IT mangers to use McAfee’s ePolicy Orchestrator (ePO) management system and its endpoint encryption client for enterprise-wide laptop management. McAfee will join SECUDE International AG, Wave Systems Corp., and WinMagic Inc. as Momentus-compatible software management tools.

Unfortunately for some customers, Dell is not yet shipping McAfee’s ePO. The computer manufacturer is instead offering Wave Systems’ Embassy Trust Suite 5.0 encryption management software.

Despite this news, Joni Clark, product marketing manager with Seagate's personal compute business unit, is optimistic that more companies will start to adopt self-encrypting technology – especially in the small to medium-sized business market.

“You know that financial institutions, health care organizations and other large Fortune 1000 companies are doing this, but it’s the small and medium companies that really need these pieces put together in an easy-to-use package,” she said.

One such medium-sized business is Massachusetts-based pizza chain Papa Gino's Inc. Chris Cahalin, manager of network operations at the franchise, said he’s deployed 80 self-encrypting notebooks to district and senior-level managers over the last year. He also plans to upgrade to Seagate’s new line of hard drives in the near future.

“To have an environment where everything is protected all the time can be a real relief for IT folks,” he said. “With this hard drive everything that gets saved to the drive is encrypted automatically. When this is built into the hardware, it encrypts as fast as you can write to media. There’s no training and painful implementation needed.”

The ability to centrally manage this security through Wave Systems’ Embassy software, Cahalin added, allows him to protect against offline admin attacks as well.

“It’s really been wonderful to see this huge paradigm shift that’s happened over the last few years where all this security is now being baked into the hardware,” he said.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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