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About2SwitchOvr

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 22, 2004
150
0
Boston
In my case, it would be a couple of doc and excel files.
I have a 20" mac running OSX, 768 megs @ 1.25 gigs.

I want to either hide them, or password protect them. Hide, I guess I can bury them deep into some sub-folders, but is there a way to make them invisible?

THANKS!
 

macrlz9

macrumors 6502a
Dec 6, 2003
600
127
Illinois
what i always do is i make a new disk image with disk utility, password protect it, and throw all of my files on it! i put the disk image in my documents folder and i have a shortcut in the side bar so all i have to do is click on the "personal stuff" icon in the side bar, enter my password, then a disk image appears with all myt stuff in it!
 

jsw

Moderator emeritus
Mar 16, 2004
22,910
44
Andover, MA
macrlz9 said:
what i always do is i make a new disk image with disk utility, password protect it, and throw all of my files on it! i put the disk image in my documents folder and i have a shortcut in the side bar so all i have to do is click on the "personal stuff" icon in the side bar, enter my password, then a disk image appears with all myt stuff in it!

Agreed! This is the best way to protect your, er, sensitive files. ;)

To be specific:

  • Open Applications->Utilities->Disk Utility.
  • Click the "New Image" icon in the toolbar (or use Images->New...->Blank Image)
  • Fill in "Save as:" field with a name.
  • Select an appropriate size
  • Set the excryption to AES-128
  • Keep the format as "read/write disk image"
  • Click "Create"
  • You'll be prompted for a password - enter one
  • Very important: Unselect "Remember password (add to Keychain)" before clicking OK to set the password.

This creates the password-protected .dmg file. Double-click it to open it (supply the password, and don't opt to store it in your keychain, or else anyone in your account can open it). It then looks like a mounted disk image - drag things into/out of it. Eject it to return it to it's password-protected state.
 

About2SwitchOvr

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 22, 2004
150
0
Boston
jsw said:
Agreed! This is the best way to protect your, er, sensitive files. ;)

To be specific:

  • Open Applications->Utilities->Disk Utility.
  • Click the "New Image" icon in the toolbar (or use Images->New...->Blank Image)
  • Fill in "Save as:" field with a name.
  • Select an appropriate size
  • Set the excryption to AES-128
  • Keep the format as "read/write disk image"
  • Click "Create"
  • You'll be promted for a password - enter one
  • Very important:Unselect "Remember password (add to Keychain)" before clicking OK to set the password.


This creates the password-protected .dmg file. Double-click it to open it (supply the password, and don't opt to store it in your keychain, or else anyone in your account can open it). It then looks like a mounted disk image - drag things into/out of it. Eject it to return it to it's password-protected state.


Great, thanks for the information.
I'm going to try this now :)
 

7on

macrumors 601
Nov 9, 2003
4,939
0
Dress Rosa
Yeah, I do use the disk utility method too. What is niftier is to change the icon for the disk image into a folder icon. Then someone just browsing through will also just over look it as an empty folder (in columns view empty folders lack the arrow on the left and a sparsedisk image with it's icon changed will appear to be just that).
 

mikeyredk

macrumors 65816
Mar 13, 2003
1,267
1
7on said:
Yeah, I do use the disk utility method too. What is niftier is to change the icon for the disk image into a folder icon. Then someone just browsing through will also just over look it as an empty folder (in columns view empty folders lack the arrow on the left and a sparsedisk image with it's icon changed will appear to be just that).

but don't most people throw out empty folders?
 

rendezvouscp

macrumors 68000
Aug 20, 2003
1,526
0
Long Beach, California
I usually just password protect in Word. Under the preferences, you can password protect documents. Also, for any PDF's, I run them through Acrobat and make a protected PDF. It's really cool. BTW, I've forgotten the password to some Word documents before (but I had the password in a file in my Keychain), and tried to open the documents with everything I could on my Mac. Nothing was shown in the document, work or password. Very cool.
–Chase
 

sushi

Moderator emeritus
Jul 19, 2002
15,639
3
キャンプスワ&#
rendezvouscp said:
I usually just password protect in Word. Under the preferences, you can password protect documents. Also, for any PDF's, I run them through Acrobat and make a protected PDF. It's really cool. BTW, I've forgotten the password to some Word documents before (but I had the password in a file in my Keychain), and tried to open the documents with everything I could on my Mac. Nothing was shown in the document, work or password. Very cool.
–Chase
Uh, password protected Word files are fairly easy to break (to see the content inside the document).

Sushi
 

michaelrjohnson

macrumors 68020
Aug 9, 2000
2,180
5
53132
I use LameSecure. It suits my needs perfectly, and sounds like it should suit yours too. It's Freeware, however, it's currently not available for download from their site. I can send you a copy via email later on today. Just contact me.
 

ethernet76

macrumors 6502a
Jul 15, 2003
501
0
In OS 9 resedit was a nice tool for making files invisible.

Otherwise all my files are stored in an invisible file on my iPod.

I don't like passwording because they're a hassle.

However, if my iPod were stolen or broken, I'm SOL.

The real question is where do you hide your porn so people don't find it?

Also, I'm assuming you could modify permissions on folders and set them to nobody or root so you'd have to be a superuser to access them.
 

m.r.m.

macrumors regular
Oct 25, 2003
181
0
Germany
ethernet76 said:
The real question is where do you hide your porn so people don't find it?

everybody was being so james bond about it, but you had to be so direct, didn´t you! :eek: :D
 

couchpotatoe

macrumors newbie
Jul 22, 2004
2
0
Sanger, Texas
Invisible files

You can also make the disk image you create invisible using terminal. all you have to do is rename it with a period in fornt of the name. For example, to change a file in your home folder named blah, you would go to terminal and type:

mv "blah" ".blah"

then when you wanted to make it visible again, you would type

mv ".blah" "blah"

invisible unless you know it's there.
 

railthinner

macrumors regular
Jul 1, 2002
177
0
Thanks for the thread and great answers. Something I've wondered myself for a while and I'll be whipping out disk utility when I get home.
 

avalys

macrumors 6502
Jun 4, 2004
303
40
rendezvouscp said:
How? I'd like to try to break into my own documents.
–Chase
There are dozens of utilities on the web that will do this. Try Googling "word password recovery."
 

michaelrjohnson

macrumors 68020
Aug 9, 2000
2,180
5
53132
ethernet76 said:
The real question is where do you hide your porn so people don't find it?

It may not *necessarily* be for pornography. In my case, I recently got a Laptop (12" PB). Now that I carry it with me, many, *many* more people use my computer. While I have no problem with them using the apps, I dont' want them in my files, be it papers, letters, etc. By protecting a few select folders, I dont' have to stop what I'm doing (and log in to a guest account) to dazzle another passerby.
 

duy802

macrumors newbie
Jul 23, 2004
9
0
7on said:
Yeah, I do use the disk utility method too. What is niftier is to change the icon for the disk image into a folder icon. Then someone just browsing through will also just over look it as an empty folder (in columns view empty folders lack the arrow on the left and a sparsedisk image with it's icon changed will appear to be just that).

Great idea. How do you change the disk image into a folder icon? Thanks!
 

jsw

Moderator emeritus
Mar 16, 2004
22,910
44
Andover, MA
duy802 said:
Great idea. How do you change the disk image into a folder icon? Thanks!

Easy. Click on the disk image and "Get Info" (command-I). Click on a folder - any folder - and do the same. Click on the folder icon within the info window and copy with command-C. click on the disk image icon in its info window and paste (command-v). Done!
 

jsw

Moderator emeritus
Mar 16, 2004
22,910
44
Andover, MA
These are the icons I'm talking about. Click on the folder one, copy it, then click on the .dmg icon, and paste.
 

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jsw

Moderator emeritus
Mar 16, 2004
22,910
44
Andover, MA
Another minor hint: rename the .dmg file to remove the ".dmg" part. OS X will still know how to open it, and it won't be so obvious.
 

duy802

macrumors newbie
Jul 23, 2004
9
0
jsw said:
Easy. Click on the disk image and "Get Info" (command-I). Click on a folder - any folder - and do the same. Click on the folder icon within the info window and copy with command-C. click on the disk image icon in its info window and paste (command-v). Done!

Just did it. Thanks a bunch! I've been using a Mac for almost a year now and am constantly astonished at just how elegant and simple everything is!!
 
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