![]() ![]() ![]() Your files are not valuable enough to you to encrypt then, don't mind somebody taking them Lol, not using cloud encryption, best of luck Simple rule, don't run/do sensitive stuff in uncontrolled environments I suggest you invest in a small carry about machine you can run rather than start launching it in uncontrolled environments (or a live USB bootable if you don't want to carry around hardware) Not sure why you would want to store the binary executable in the cloud, if you want a portable, you could go even further and have a live USB image with Linux or Windows on it and run that with a safer envorinment, one that is controlled by you I suggest you verify the signature every time before launching it if it is stored out of your control, I also suggest using the likes of CryFS for storing in the cloud, and even if you store it in the cloud, it has to first be synced/downloaded and then you're running it in the memory of your local environment and at risk of any running memory being read via non-invasive attaching, we do not have homomorphic encryption on our environments yet so memory is leechable I personally prefer KeePass portable and have it in and synchronize across all my Windows systems. Not only it works with USB drives, KeePass portable can also happily live in network share/cloud (dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive,, or personal sshfs / samba server). ![]() It doesn't need administrative privilege. "portable" is more like saving everything (software and user data) in 1 directory, the user can even move the directory around and still be able to use the software. "Installation" probably needs Administrator privilege if the user choose to install the software to the default system directory, and lots companies won't allow user to install "installation" edition on company's laptop. AFAIK, "installation" follows Windows' convention: install the software in some known system directory (default to C:\Program Files), the software will be available to all users, each user's personal data will be saved in their %AppData% directory, and an administrator will be able to use Windows' "Uninstall" feature to remove the software. ![]()
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