some minor spelling stuff

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lars 2007-02-12 23:41:09 +00:00
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<div class="centercontent">
<h2>What does the CryptoBox do?</h2>
<p>Usually all your files like phone numbers, love letters, bank
account data etc. are stored in plaintext on your computers
harddisk. All the data is accessable by anyone who has access to the
harddisk. This is very bad in case someone you don't trust has
your harddisk. E.g. a thief that steals your notebook, or breaks
in your house or company. If the thief has your disk he/she can
also read all the files that where saved on it, no matter if you
have a login password - the files are always stored in
plaintext.</p>
account data etc. are stored in plaintext on your computer's
harddisk.
All the data is accessible for everyone who has access to the harddisk.
This is very bad in case someone you don't trust gets your harddisk.
E.g. a thief that steals your notebook, or breaks into your house or company.
If the thief has your disk he/she can also read all the files that
where saved on it, no matter whether you have a login password or not -
the files are always stored in plaintext.
</p>
<p>The <b>CryptoBox</b> brings easy to use data encryption to your
computer. This works out of the box and doesn't need complicated
<p>The <b>CryptoBox</b> brings easy-to-use data encryption to your
computer. This works out of the box and does not need complicated
configuration steps.</p>
<p>Here comes a small usage example for the CryptoBox with a discarded
PC as fileserver:</p>
<p>Here comes a small usage example for the CryptoBox with an obsolete
PC as a fileserver:</p>
<p>You boot up the old PC with the CryptoBox live-CD. After the
completed boot process you can access it with your browser via
network. Then you partition and reformat the harddisk of the old
<p>Boot up the old PC with the CryptoBox live-CD.
Now you can access it with your browser via the network.
Then you partition and reformat the harddisk of the old
PC with encryption support. Therefore you provide a passphrase.
This is all done through the user friendly webinterface. You can
also plug in an external harddisk and use this for encrypted data
storage. Afterwards you copy your sensitive data over the local
network to the CryptoBox. It is stored on its harddisk in a
secure way. Nobody can access the data, without giving the right
passphrase before.</p>
This is all done through the user friendly webinterface.
You can also plug in an external harddisk and use this to store
your encrypted data.
Afterwards you copy your sensitive data over the local
network to the CryptoBox.
It is stored on its harddisk in a secure way.
Nobody can access your data without the right passphrase.
</p>
</div>