However, Windows OS will fill the space with zeros which is encrypted causing very time consuming creation for large file containers. Does the same thing happen if a Linux distro is used instead of Microsoft Windows OS?
@morton-f I would appreciate it if you could think carefully about what you are writing before posting your reply such as the one above. Every Debian user knows what sudo apt install package or sudo apt-get install package does. For your information, Veracrypt is unavailable as a package in Debian's official repos.
@morton-f I would appreciate it if you could answer my Questions (1), (2a) and (2b) to the point. Thanks.
@marvolo Hello I quite like your detailed description of the incident and am sorry that you're the victim of this very unfortunate incident. Yesterday I wanted to reinstall Windows on my SSD drive. What's the version of the Microsoft Windows that you'd planned to reinstall? Of course, in hindsight, I should have physically removed all the drives from the mainboard except the SSD drive where I wanted to reinstall Windows on. The incident that you'd encountered further reinforces my belief that Microsoft...
@marvolo Hello I quite like your detailed description of the incident and am sorry that you're the victim of this very unfortunate incident. Yesterday I wanted to reinstall Windows on my SSD drive. What's the version of the Microsoft Windows that you'd planned to reinstall? Of course, in hindsight, I should have physically removed all the drives from the mainboard except the SSD drive where I wanted to reinstall Windows on. The incident that you'd encountered further reinforces my belief that Microsoft...
@Bernd Allow me to give you an analogy. You have a desktop or laptop computer. You password-protect your MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI as your first level of protection. The password is weak and can be guessed easily. After entering your password in the MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI, you boot your computer into Debian or Microsoft Windows. You password-protect your Microsoft Windows using BitLocker or Debian using LUKS2 as a second level of protection. The password that you set for BitLocker or LUKS2 encryption is...
@Bernd Allow me to give you an analogy. You have a desktop or laptop computer. You password-protect your MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI as your first level of protection. The password is weak and can be guessed easily. After entering your password in the MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI, you boot your computer into Debian or Microsoft Windows. You password-protect your Microsoft Windows using BitLocker or Debian using LUKS2 as a second level of protection. The password that you set for BitLocker or LUKS2 encryption is...
@Bernd Allow me to give you an analogy. You have a desktop or laptop computer. You password-protect your MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI as your first level of protection. The password is weak and can be guessed easily. After entering your password in the MBR/BIOS or GPT/UEFI, you boot your computer into Debian or Microsoft Windows. You password-protect your Microsoft Windows using BitLocker or Debian using LUKS2 as a second level of protection. The password that you set for BitLocker or LUKS2 encryption is...