On the one hand I agree with Kurt that the risks of similar features would be greater than the benefits, and that "self-destruction" would be useless with law enforcement in a professional forensic setting. On the other hand, one could think of different scenarios other than a professional forensic setting. A non-professional threat might try to get you to just enter your password into your own software on your own PC, before trying other ways. Or, your notebook or USB drive might be stolen/found...
On the one hand I agree with Kurt that the risks of similar features would be greater than the benefits, and that "self-destruction" would be useless with law enforcement in a professional forensic setting. On the other hand, one could think of different scenarios other than a professional forensic setting. A non-professional threat might try to get you to just enter your password into your own software on your own PC, before trying other ways. Or, your notebook or USB drive might be stolen/found...
I've just experencied the same exact issue. After I assigned a drive letter to the partition volume, then VC could mount it again. I had no problems whatsoever until yesterday, that is to say in the past I could mount the same VC volume without assigning a drive letter. Then, something happened, a Windows10 blue screen. After restarting the PC, VC gave the error "The device is not ready. Source: MountVolume:7721" when trying to mount the volume. After assigning a drive letter, no more errors.
I've just experencied the same exact issue. After I assigned a drive letter to the partition volume, then VC could mount it again. I had no problems whatsoever until yesterday, that is to say in the past I could mount the same VC volume without assigning a drive letter. Then, something happened, a Windows10 blue screen (sorry I have no further detail on that). After restarting the PC, VC gave the error "The device is not ready. Source: MountVolume:7721" when trying to mount the volume. After assigning...