How to secure your data & id with an Offshore Desktop

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How to secure your data & id with an Offshore Desktop

If you want to secure your computing, protect yourself from spying eyes & keep your documents safe consider building (or paying for) an offshore desktop!

What is an offshore desktop? 

It's a computer residing in a different country from your own (i.e. offshore), where you store and work with your documents. You use a thin client (browser-like program) to access your applications and documents on your offshore desktop and no data will ever touch the disk of the pc you are working from.

How can you get your own offshore desktop? 

If you are happy with weak security then building your own is relatively easy. Just rent a dedicated (or even virtual) linux server, install the thin-client server (FreeNX) and you are set up to go.

The other way is renting your offshore desktop. If you look for a professional, secure service, that is mostly Strongdesk from the dominican SecureIT Inc. They give out a free test account, so this is a way to test the concept. See below for some free/cheap non-secure alternatives (currently offline?)

What do you need to access you offshore desktop? 

Your local pc needs the client software from  nomachine, (available for Windows, Linux and Apple OS X) and that's it.  To enhance security, you can download a live linux distribution like Thinstation and either burn it on cd or put it on an usb stick. Then you can boot any pc and have a guarateed virus- and spyware-free platform from which you can access your offshore
desktop.

What OS gives me security?

A *ix based solution will be more secure than a windows-based one. Especially if you use either SE Linux (Security Enhanced Linux) or even better FreeBSD from 6.0 onwards with the Mandatory Access Control extensions from the TrustedBSD project.  FreeBSD with activated and properly administrated mandatory access control and auditing is one of the safest software environments on the planet. No windows solution can provide the same level of protection.
Verdict: use FreeBSD or Linux, NOT Windows!

Which applications can I use? 

All non-multimedia applications. Do not expect video or flash or sound to work. Do not expect to be able to create great paintings with your paint program.

But do expect to be able to use your graphics program to create things like buttons or web graphics, to edit photos and to put together web banners.

And everything else: office applications, project planning, ERP, web browsers, email & calendaring, mind mapping, diagramming;  everything non-multimedia works just like on your local pc.  

For whom is this?

This is an ideal platform for e.g. investigave journalists,  pre-start-ups who are geographically distributed, offshore businesses, business who want to easily integrate a global workforce.NGO's, either while they also need to integrate an integrated workforce, of because they operate in an unfriendly enviroment and do not want their data confiscated. Lastly, the new breed of perpetual travellers have the perfect setup with an offshore desktop.

 

Offshore Desktop Links 

Strongdesk Offshore Desktop
An offshore firm offering security and anonymity-oriented offshore desktops. Uses military-grade security, deletes logfiles after 24 hours, constantly monitors servers and uses mandatory access control to isolate users from each other. Servers in europe and asia. Optional offshore voicemail & PBX, team support, full erp, calendaring software. From US$600/year.
Spirit VPN and remote PC
A Windows-Solution by the Spirit offshore hoster. Get your own windows pc, connect through the windows remote client protocol, RDP. From US$ 3,100/year
OffshoreDesktop
A panamanian, security-oriented, windows-based solution. From US$2,295/year.
CosmoPod
Get a free (ad-sponsored) NX desktop located in the US. Can be considered offshore for everyone outside the US ;) Not security centric, but cheap. You can get an ad-free version below US$100/year. Uses the KDE desktop enviroment.
Seems to be offline :-(
Desktop On Demand
Another free NX desktop, with GNOME as desktop enviroment. Not security oriented. The business is UK based, so it might be offshore for US customers. Costs 2p per 1GB Storage per week for storage above 1GB.
Seems to be offline :-(
HOWTO Access A Superfast Linux Desktop From Anywhere Using FreeNX
This HOWTO is a step-by-step guide for configuring the nxserver, generating custom encrypted keys, and using a combination of Live-CD and USB thumbdrive to create a portable nxclient for remote access.

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Thin Client, Security and Offshore Info 

Where to Stash Your Cash Legally by Robert E. Bauman

Where to Stash Your Cash Legally by Robert E. Bauman

This book details the "Offshore Haven more...1 point

If you absolutely do not want your data offshore, you should follow this advice: 

Online and Computer Security Advice - 20 Tips For Improved Safety
By Todd Curtis, PhD


What do you think of when you think of online security? One useful definition of online security is the ability to identify, manage, or eliminate threats to information, to technology, or to the well-being of a group or individual. For your family, those threats include attempts to steal, damage, or disable your home computer; attempts to steal the information in your computer or data storage device, and attempts to physically or psychologically harm your child.


One of the best things you can do to protect your family is make the effort to take the following preventive actions to improve your computer and online security.


Top 10 Computer Security Tips


1. Make online and offline security a key part of your family's online habits.


2. Choose a family data manager who will track where the family's data is stored.


3. Back up data regularly.


4. Keep a written record of where data is stored.


5. Update your operating system software regularly.


6. Use security protection software programs and update them regularly.


7. Use software from reputable and reliable sources.


8. Take action if your computer starts to behave strangely.


9. Regularly review your family's online activities and address any potential security problems.


10. Either keep or destroy old hard drives.


In addition to making the effort to prevent problems, you and your family should also be ready to act if you recognize that you may have a potential security problem on your hands.


Top 10 Signs of Potential Security Problems


1. Files or programs on your computer are mysteriously missing, damaged, or updated.


2. A family member has unexplained or unusual financial activity in a bank account or credit card.


3. You don't use any security protection software, or you do use the software but don't update it regularly.


4. A stranger attempts to arrange a meeting with your child.


5. New or unfamiliar software is mysteriously loaded on your computer.


6. Your computer has been affected by a virus or other malicious software.


7. Your child is installing new software without your knowledge or permission.


8. You get a request to email sensitive personal or financial information.


9. Your computer or any storage device with sensitive files is lost, stolen, or damaged.


10. Your computer starts to behave strangely.


Keeping your family and your computer secure does not have to be complicated, time consuming, or expensive so long as you take steps to prevent problems from happening or to address problems quickly if they do happen.


An additional resource that may help you and your family with your security issues is the Family Forms Pack from Speedbrake Publishing. This downloadable document at http://forms.speedbrake.com/ contains several forms that you can print out and use to help manage your family's online activities. Included are sample family Internet use agreements, a form to record the locations of flash drives and other portable data storage devices, and a form that you can use to record user names and passwords


About the Author: Dr. Todd Curtis is the creator of the web's most popular airline safety site AirSafe.com (http://www.airsafe.com), the director of the AirSafe.com Foundation, and an expert in the areas of engineering risk assessment and risk management. He has applied those basic principles to the problem of managing Internet use, and has put many of those insights and lessons learned into his book Parenting and the Internet (Speedbrake Publishing, 2007), an easy to understand how-to guide that parents can use to manage the activities of their online children. For more information about the book and how it can help you, visit http://books.speedbrake.com


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Todd_Curtis,_PhD
http://EzineArticles.com/?Online-and-Computer-Security-Advice---20-Tips-For-Improved-Safety&id=809909

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I'm a mobile professional,  equally well versed in technological areas like computer security, web applications and remote access as well as in c...

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