How to Secure Your USB Drive

 by Crazy Leprecaun
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Everyone has files they don't want others seeing. Maybe they are financial documents, school work, or other "questionable" files. Whatever they are, you want a way to secure them. Putting a password on your PC will do you no good, and it would not be portable. Buying a USB drive makes data portable, put usually not secure. For truly secure data, you need an encrypted USB drive.

I will show you how to make a super, unhackable USB drive. It will be of no use to anyone but you, and even if someone had access to government grade hacking software, they would not be able to access the data.

I am NOT responsible for whatever you put on the drive, or whatever damage you do with said data or the drive.
 
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Step 1: The Tools

cruzer_usb_drive.gif
truecrypt.png
First and foremost, you need two things:

1) A USB drive
2) TrueCrypt

The USB drive can be obtained at any store that sells material items. You should probably get a 1GB or bigger, because 1GB only costs about $10. I am using a 4GB that I have had for 2 years (same as the one in the picture below, just half the memory).

TrueCrypt is an open-source (free for your not-so-computer-knowledgeable-person) software. It uses government grade encryption (256-bit) and better, so you can be sure your data is safe. You can download it at http://www.truecrypt.org/. After installing it, you will need to restart your computer.
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shadow wave rider says: Aug 9, 2011. 2:24 AM
what is the gutmann method? please tell me
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to shadow wave riderAug 9, 2011. 9:08 AM
It is a method of data deletion where the data is overwritten 35 times. If you delete files using it, they will be impossible to recover.
shadow wave rider in reply to Crazy LeprecaunAug 18, 2011. 2:26 AM
will it deleat everything even if im entering my really really long password and i tap a wrong key.
Jamez Britton says: Jun 17, 2011. 8:22 PM
TrueCrypt is good for encrypting documents and securing them but it is hackable.
I've done it before because I accidently forgot my password for it.
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to Jamez BrittonJun 17, 2011. 8:25 PM
And how'd you do that? Because it's government-grade encryption.
Jamez Britton in reply to Crazy LeprecaunJun 25, 2011. 12:38 AM
i downloaded a government-grade password variable hacker
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to Jamez BrittonJun 25, 2011. 1:01 AM
Oh really? And where'd you get that?
IAMAFISH says: Oct 6, 2009. 2:01 AM
Thanks for the instructable it has been very useful. What if your a paranoid terrorist government agent instead of just one of them?
michaelb958 in reply to IAMAFISHAug 10, 2010. 2:13 AM
I'm rolling around on the floor laughing at the above right now...
jvpernis says: Jul 20, 2010. 1:45 AM
can you make an usb which encrypts all files on the hard drive (and really secret files stored on the usb) until the usb is plugged in? and if u pull out the usb that all files will encrypt automaticly again? that'd be awesome because it is kinda like a key to your computer. very useful when u have a laptop. nice instructable by the way!
ArduMir says: Jun 30, 2010. 9:59 AM
A good starter tutorial, but Step 4 in your article is not always correct. I'm purely writing this to be informative, not to insult you. Flash drives use flash memory to store data, which tends to wear down after a prolonged usage. To prevent it from wearing down as quick, a technique called 'wear leveling' was implemented. Instead of a physical sector of the drive being overwritten like a normal disk, new data gets written to unused sectors of memory, while the 'overwritten data' just becomes free to use. Basically, there's two problems you'll have. The first is you won't actually be overwriting the old data, it will just write off to unused sectors to prevent wearing. Second is you're using the Gutmann method to make 35 passes across unused sectors that may never overwrite the old data, also causing wearing to your flash drive.
lockpick says: Jun 20, 2010. 3:00 PM
Hi I'm on a Mac and when I attempt to encrypt my flash drive it asks me for a pass word and when I enter a password it says incorrect. Any help?
red 9er says: May 18, 2010. 7:51 PM
Can i apply this method to say, an entire internal hard drive in a computer?
bsoud says: Sep 17, 2009. 9:08 PM
I have an external drive for work. Its encrypted and I was able to mount the drive at work. However, when I try to auto mount it at home, i put in the password, and it says "Incorrect password or no TrueCrypt volume found"...I Absolutely have the right password, its the one I used at work. Any ideas?
mox386 in reply to bsoudApr 24, 2010. 10:14 AM
I have the same problem, and there seems to be nothing out there on the internet about the Truecrypt "Incorrect password or no TrueCrypt volume found" error on the automount feature of truecrypt. It's getting to be a real hassle as it used to work on this computer. You can kinda tell others are having the issue, but there are no answers out there yet, and I've been searching for a few months off and on.
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to bsoudSep 18, 2009. 3:33 PM
The obvious answer would be that you are selecting the wrong drive to decrypt. If that's not the answer, try one of these:

1) You did forget the password (or a keyfile).
2) The header is corrupted.
3) Some strange OS or user privileges issues.

If none of those work, try the TrueCrypt Forums or TrueCrypt FAQ.
dirtbike985 says: May 8, 2009. 7:11 PM
(removed by author or community request)
Saturn V in reply to dirtbike985Apr 13, 2010. 2:17 PM
WHO CARES!!!!!!!!
ivorandjuan in reply to dirtbike985Apr 8, 2010. 10:18 PM
 hi i think that you have been bullied into believing everything the US government tells you hell if it is illegal then lets use it. usually a government makes something illegal if they cant make any money on it or they crack it  
M4industries in reply to dirtbike985Mar 25, 2010. 5:22 PM
 BS
BBBower in reply to dirtbike985Aug 28, 2009. 11:23 PM
How would encryption of your own data as such be illegal, is that like you cant put more than 3 padlocks on a bicycle?
watzhisface in reply to BBBowerDec 30, 2009. 2:03 AM
lol
adam 101 in reply to dirtbike985Aug 18, 2009. 8:36 PM
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to dirtbike985May 8, 2009. 10:41 PM
I was not aware of this. Where did you get this information?
M4industries says: Apr 8, 2010. 5:59 PM
 It says resource busy whenever I enter the password.
M4industries says: Apr 8, 2010. 5:41 PM
 Hi, on a mac, I see a select device button at the bottom of the screen, do I need to worry about this section?
M4industries in reply to M4industriesApr 8, 2010. 5:47 PM
 On second thought, never mind, my new question is it asks me my volume location and to select file.
M4industries says: Mar 25, 2010. 5:26 PM
 Can I add documents as I save them without reformatting?
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to M4industriesMar 25, 2010. 6:43 PM
Yes. You just add them when the volume is decrypted, then dismount the volume when you are done.
life-is-beautiful says: Oct 29, 2009. 6:50 PM
and the retartard states he is a terriost govenment agent and paranoid. well i say good luck with that. and good work on the instructable i put it on my flash and it works exept the fact that when i go to use it my computer says insert a drive into the port.
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to life-is-beautifulOct 30, 2009. 3:18 PM
Yeah, it will do that. You can't access the encrypted drive from My Computer (or your OS specific file browser). You have to use TrueCrypt to access it in it's "decrypted form".
Psychic Master says: Aug 30, 2009. 4:17 PM
can the drive be mounted without the truecrypt software installed on the computer you are using?
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to Psychic MasterAug 31, 2009. 11:28 AM
No. You have to have TrueCrypt installed on the computer. HOWEVER, if you have administrator privileges, you can use TrueCrypt in traveler mode. See the website for details.
rada194 says: Aug 26, 2009. 6:15 PM
How would we put are computer password as the truecrypt encryption is that possible
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to rada194Aug 31, 2009. 11:26 AM
Sorry, but I can't understand your question.
Mr. Geek says: Jun 28, 2009. 8:41 PM
im having a problem, or im just really dumb, I made an encrypted file, but i can just go into windows explorer and open it up.
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to Mr. GeekAug 31, 2009. 11:24 AM
Well, it's probably still mounted. In the main TrueCrypt window, dismount the drive. That should solve the issue.
frodobot says: Jul 5, 2009. 7:56 AM
This is a really cool idea. BUT, my problem is that where you put "A hidden partition gives you what is called "plausable deniability." This means that there is a hidden drive there, and someone may know it, but they cannot prove it. A hidden partition is a great place to put REALLY sensitive documents." made me immediately think that paedophiles and internet perves could use this to hide paedophilic files and images. Does anybody think the same?
El Mano says: May 29, 2009. 9:09 PM
I just want to check before I take a shot at ruinig my new USB drive: how do you remove the encryption and return the encrypted drive to its original state? Secondly, I've hunted through the TrueCrypt user's guide, but I can't find my answer: do you have to have TrueCrypt on the computer to open the drive? I gather that the process encrypts the entire drive, leaving no space to carry around the TrueCrypt files. Rather useless if you want to use the drive on a computer at school or someplace.
Crazy Leprecaun (author) in reply to El ManoMay 30, 2009. 8:00 AM
1) To remove the encryption, you format the drive. If you do not want to lose the data, you can copy it to your computer or to another USB or to an encrypted volume. 2) Yes, you have to have TrueCrypt installed on a computer to access the drive. While this is a problem, there is no way around it.
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