I don't see anything there about centrally managed full disk encryption for Linux with bitlocker. There are products out there but no way a shop is going to invest in multiplatform solution just for one person. I would look at doing native Linux encryption (whatever the distro offers during installation) and turn the key over to IT. That might satisfy the insurance requirement without having a managed solution for Linux.
On Oct 17, 2016 7:50 PM, "Stephen Partington" <cryptworks@gmail.com> wrote:Incorrect, I have done this with Ubuntu. It requires you to turn over the initial boot records to windows and use an application like EasyBCD to manage them. but it provides full bitlocker compatibility with Linux.See method 3 from this post for a baseline. http://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/ articles/9528.how-to-multiboot -with-bitlocker-tpm-and-a-non- windows-os.aspx I have done this with windows 7, Have not tried it with windows 10.On Mon, Oct 17, 2016 at 4:41 PM, Nathan England <nathan@nmecs.com> wrote:-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
I asked my IT department a question today and may have opened pandora's
box.
I've been allowed to run Fedora on my company laptop for a couple of
years now. I am using a personal hard drive for Fedora that way if I
needed to I could put the original Windows drive back in and access what
ever I needed.
I haven't used my Windows drive in over a year now and it's causing some
issues with corporate AD and the anti-virus. So I requested installing
windows in a VirtualBox and having corporate IT join it to the domain,
install av, office suite, and the other stuff I may need but likely
never will use, and then I can easily boot it once a week to keep my av
up to date.
The response was that our insurance requires the use of Bitlocker.
Full stop...
Their potential solution is to partition the drive to have Windows and
Linux but both be encrypted with Bitlocker so they could access the
drive contents should I ever leave or die or what ever...
I realize encrypting the linux partition with bitlocker is not likely
ever going to happen (right?) but are there corporate linux systems that
allow IT access to encrypted volumes like Bitlocker and AD?
I feel dirty even asking this. Doesn't this defeat the entire purpose of
encryption to begin with? ugh... I guess it makes sense, but it sounds
like inferior by design.
- --
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Nathan England
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