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That was just me being goofy in that bit (and only that), but I hope the rest of my message went across. :)

> In fact for file storage why not use an encrypted disk volume so you don't need to use PGP?

Different threat models. Disk encryption (LUKS, VeraCrypt, plain dm-crypt) protects against physical theft. Once mounted, everything is plaintext to any process with access. File-level encryption protects files at rest and in transit: backups to untrusted storage, sharing with specific recipients, storing on systems you do not fully control. You cannot send someone a LUKS volume to decrypt one file, and backups of a mounted encrypted volume are plaintext unless you add another layer.





>You cannot send someone a LUKS volume to decrypt one file, and backups of a mounted encrypted volume are plaintext unless you add another layer.

Veracrypt, and I'm sure others, allow you to do exactly this. You can create a disk image that lives in a file (like a .iso or .img) and mount/unmount it, share it, etc.


That’s not what they said. They’re saying you often want to give someone a specific file from a disk, rather than the whole set of files.

You can still do that with a .dmg, for example. I've done it, it works more or less like a zip.

But even if that was somehow unreasonable or undesired, you can use Filippo's age for that. PGP has no use case that isn't done better by some other tool, with the possible exception of "cosplay as a leet haxor"




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