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Todd Godchaux's avatar
Todd Godchaux
Brass Contributor
Jun 21, 2017
Solved

Can I ask a Bitlocker question?

As I understand it, an SSD is built with wear leveling and the actual space is double of the advertised available space to the OS. If an SSD has been in use for an unknown period of time and is later Bitlocked, does all of the drive become protected, even the dormant bits that can't be seen and are "resting"?

  • Chris Hallum's avatar
    Chris Hallum
    Jun 21, 2017

    Wear levelling algorithms are proprietary per drive manufacturer. An attacker would have to work around the firmware to even check out spare blocks, and then hope to understand how data is scattered to piece something meaningful together. Attacking data that way is likely quite difficult, but theoretically possible. The risk to any data present prior to encryption would go down over time after encryption as the drive is used, and spare blocks get reused for wear levelling but of course you’ll never know for sure if everything is encrypted. 

     

    Your best bet is to always to encrypt from the start, regardless of the encryption solution which all share the same issue, before any sensitive data is on the drive, so you can achive the assurance you're looking for. 

     

6 Replies

  • It would appear that you have a choice:

     

    • Encrypt used disk space only
    • Encrypt entire drive (slower) - for drives already in use

     

    • Todd Godchaux's avatar
      Todd Godchaux
      Brass Contributor
      Right, but is the "entire contents" of the drive just what the application sees, or every bit/cell on the SSD that's controlled by the firmware. Maybe this is a deeper question for the hardware vendor.
      • SigurdWerner's avatar
        SigurdWerner
        Iron Contributor

        Just what the is shown to the OS by the SSD, but in the moment a new, never used before cell is activated it will be encrypted, so no need to encrypt 'everything' upfront, exept for a very small performance impact

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