Z transparent popclip extensions
You interrogator will have no way to tell there’s more in there. In the above scenario, you simply give up, after some fake complaining of course, the password to the outer container. To anyone who inspects the outer container, there is no way to tell it contains a hidden container. You can then create the inner or “hidden” container, giving it a different password. Into what VeraCrypt refers to as the “outer” container, you can place information that looks important, but in reality isn’t. VeraCrypt allows you to create a container inside a container. This is where hidden containers come into play. At some point you would wind up giving in, giving access to data you didn’t want shared (your Bitcoin wallet). Now you could setup a standard VeraCrypt container, but what if a tech savvy person noticed it? They could demand you give up your password to the vault. I’m not casting aspersions on anyone’s honesty, but you never know. Often times a countries border agents will want to search your computer. You travel a lot, and are concerned with someone tampering with your data. Let’s say you have a Bitcoin wallet with a sizable amount of money.
Z transparent popclip extensions how to#
In this post I’ll cover how to use VeraCrypt’s hidden containers feature, explaining what it is for then seeing step by step screen shots on how to set it up and use it. If you are not familiar with VeraCrypt, I’d suggest going back and reading it first so that this post will make some sense.
![z transparent popclip extensions z transparent popclip extensions](https://pilotmoon.com/popclip/extensions/icon/sort.png)
![z transparent popclip extensions z transparent popclip extensions](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pilotmoon/PopClip-Extensions/master/docs-assets/texticons/symbol-signpost.right.png)
In my previous post I explained the fundamentals of the powerful encryption tool, VeraCrypt.