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Back from Penguicon 2016
Back from Penguicon 2016.
Did two presentations this year. One on Tor, its working and hidden services. The other on I2P and its general operations. There was a great keynote from Bruce Schneier on how data and data products, as the business saying goes, “if you’re not paying for it, you are the product”. This is more relevant now than ever with the scooping up of much of your information by business and government agencies. You many think that the information collected has no effect on me if they keep it, but if you really think about the information you are just giving away, once it is out of your hands, you no longer have any control over what is it being used for and in some cases how it is being used against you. Something people should really think about, but unfortunately, they will not until it’s too late. Few other tech talks were fun to be at, same strangeness and interesting people watching as always. May do a few more talks next year, so keep watching for details.
If you have never been to Penguicon, then I recommend checking the next one out.
Here is a link to my presentations
The Dark web Big Three – https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3AAfAIeWS0KNDBhcnBva0xRcE0
Tor_general – https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3AAfAIeWS0Ka2otNElOekEwZHM
i2p_general – https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B3AAfAIeWS0KeVZYdkZISkN4MVk
What future do we want..
This posting will be a bit different this time. I am just going to discuss general security thoughts and feelings about what is going on in the world.
The most pressing is the expansion of spying this government is doing on you and me.
Many have read about the NSA capturing much of the data that is being exchanged on the internet. A lot has been discussed about the legal and moral rights to do so. You will have heard the expression “if you have nothing to hide then is should not matter”, I put foreword that “why are you spying on me if I have nothing to hide?” I also question the reason the number of acts that were prevented are classified. I believe the reason they are classified is because it does not work and if brought to the light of day we would demand the wastefulness of it stopped
How much of this spying effects the society as a whole? If you know you are being watched it has been show that you will change your behavior, and sadly not for the better. Many of us will not express ourselves as openly as we should for a free society to work.
As part of human nature is we give up freedoms when we are afraid, think of 911 and what was taken from you. Its not weakness on your part but it is just the way we are, not good not bad it just is.
Many say well its been allowed by law, but is it really? There are unjust laws, created by people wanting to keep the status the way it is for them and you. In our long history there have been laws created to control you by others, never forget that. Must we always follow a law because it is a law? I say no, we must follow the Constitution and its fundamental principles, and one of the principles is liberty. Having what you say and to who, stored and sorted for reasons that are hidden from you is not the actions of a free society but the actions of a broken society. Would the creators of this country have agreed or would they as well be labeled malcontent’s and disruptive by this very same government? I bet they would be. So give a voice to your questions and ask them, not by email but by true letter or phone call to your congressional representative. Let them know that what they are doing is not what a free and open society does if it wants to stay that way. Lets take back our government so it is again a free and open country by and for the people. Don’t know who your representative is? Find it here: http://www.house.gov/representatives/find/
What can you do?
You may say that security is hard to do, yes it is, but with some effort most everyone can exchange information privately. There is a framework called the internet that can help, search and ask and you will be rewarded many time over for the better. There are E-mail tools, IM tools, Chat tools, and web tools that can help keep what you say private. Many of the tools work on most of the devices you use, from phone to computer and are quite easy to install and setup. Stay informed on what is being done with and to your data. If there is a question then look for the answer and if the given answer seems incorrect then look deeper.
Just need to remember, its like anything we as humans create, it can be used for good or evil, its up to us to decide how we use it.
Secure chat with cryptocat
With some of the events in the news lately of your privacy being spied upon not only by criminals but by your own government, keeping your conversations private even if you have nothing to hide is your right no matter what you are told. In this entry I will discuss a program that will allow you to chat with others at the same time be secured and encrypted. The nice part of this program is that it is done via your web browser or if you have a mac then there is a program that can be installed and run.
First off like every program there may be bugs so keep up to date, nothing is truly secure forever. What may be secure today with changes in technology tomorrow it may not be. Sorry to burst your bubble but that is the way of technology. So now for the program.
The program is called cryptocat. There are two options one is a plugin for most main stream browsers, Chrome, Firefox and Safari. There is also a program you can run on your modern mac. The site to get the plugin or program is https://crypto.cat/ at least for now that is, it may change so do a web search to find it if the link does not work. You can also set up a cryptocat server so you have even more control on your chat exchanges. It has a feel of a IRC chat client because you define your user name and room name in real time so it can change as needed. There are some predefined rooms if you wish, quite interesting ones as well. There is a lot of documentation on the site so I will leave you to look it over as you should for any security software to see if it will work for you.
Installing is quite easy and fast. Open your Firefox, Chrome or Safari browser and go to the cryptocat web site. It will be a https link so if is not then look again for the link. It should have selected the proper plugin for your browser if not then you may want to see if any java settings are causing issues. After you have downloaded and installed the plugin and restarted your browser you should be ready to start.
Click on the icon that looks like an 8bit Cat. A dialog box will open that will give you field for conversation name and nickname. Enter a conversation name and a nick name you want to be for this chat session and press connect and your ready to go in a few moments. Secure and encrypted between you and others.
That’s it and that simple..
Also please donate to them so they can keep up the work and keep it secure.
3-2-1 start.. data today and tomorrow..
In this short entry I will talk about ways to backup your file and why it is easier than many people think to create a routine for it. Most of us have had that sinking feeling as we try to find something in the massive clutter of our system and are not able to find it for a while. Think of how you would feel if everyone of your files were gone or scrambled on your systems. Not good I bet.
It is not truly hard to create a system to keep the data safe, yes it will cost a little in some cases but it more than out weighs the frustration of losing your tax records or school papers.
One of the most basic ways is what is called the “3-2-1 system”. That is, three copies of the data, two different media’s and one of them off-site. With the size of the hard drives now have a few one or more terabyte external drives are not that expensive. You could also take one of the disk drives and put it in a bank box for safety, even store it at your parents or friends house. The two, that is two different medias part are simple as DVD disks. Most new machines have DVD writers and programs that allow you to use the DVD as a standard type drive. If you want to go old school then use of “tape drives” are also a good option.
There are even “cloud” based services that will back up your data to their storage for you. Depending on the amount of data and bandwidth you have it could take weeks to fully backup the data. It would cover the one off site location requirement of the “3-2-1 system”. After the initial upload of the data then keeping your files up-to-date would only require small uploads.
There are some options I would recommend, that will add an extra level of security. The first, if possible, have the data encrypted in some way. That way if by chance it was stolen the thieves could not read the data, or even if your “friend/family” got a bit nosy they are not able to read the information. Second, test the data from time to time to make sure it is being backed-up correctly. I have see cases that it looks like it is being backed up but the data is damaged so the backup is worthless. Not a fun time to find not only is your main but also the backup data is damaged as well. Lastly, set up a schedule of some sort to keep it up to date. There are programs that will automatically back up changes, Mac OSX has Time Machine, Linux has a few as does windows. If having question then talk to your local “geek” they will have ideas to help.
Now start that back up and you can sleep easier at night..”3-2-1 start”
Bye for now ()-()
Setup and sending encrypted e-mail.
With the changes in many of the laws that kept the government out of your information, they have more access now than anytime in the country’s past. If you don’t mind the intrusion access then that’s fine, but if you do read on.
This entry will cover setting up and sending your encrypted mail to another using Thunderbird, EnigMail plugin and PGP /GnuPG programs. I am using Thunderbird because it is available for most every operating system around and its free, but I would ask you give a donation to help keep it around.
If your already using Thunderbird mail client then you are half way finished, if not you will need to install the client for your OS to use first and get in working correctly. Go to www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/ and download the version for your system, then setup your account. You will need to install enigma mail plugin and GnuPG. To get EnigMail plugin go to http://enigmail.mozdev.org/home/index.php.html and select the version for the OS you are using. If you are using a newer version of Thunderbird you can go to the “Add-ons” sections and search for then install from there, simple and easy or you just download the version and select Install from the “Tools -> Add-ons” menu, Select the .XPI file and install. Go to www.gnupg.org to get a copy of the program and install using the instruction for your OS system.
Now that you have a general idea on what, why and how of encryption, lets get started using it to send mail to another person. Install the Thunderbird plugin and install GNUpg program as well on your system. The first thing you will need to do in set up a public/private key. The Private or (secret key) is for you, the public key is for everyone else. There are two ways to generate the keys. One way is to use the command line, the other is to use the GUI in the Thunderbird OpenPGP option, for now will show the OpenPGP option.
Start Thunderbird then select OpenPGP, from the drop down menu select “Key Management”. Select “Generate” then “New key pair”. Select the Account / User ID you want to use then give it a paraphrase, you may also want to give it a comment, that is up to you. You can leave the Key expires option alone for this time, you can play around with others after setup. Select the Advance tab, depending on the speed of your machine you can leave the settings for Key size and Key type alone. Increasing the size will increase the time it takes to generate the keys, if you want to make it very difficult for people to hack your keys use the 4096 and DSA & EL Gamal option, it will take a while to create the keys so be aware of that. The 2048 key size is quite large and difficult to crack so you can leave the Key size and key type alone. After you are happy with the settings select Generate Key, sit back and wait for a bit while it generates the keys for you. When the keys have been generated they will show up in the Key management box.
Now lets get to using the generated keys. First you need to send them to another person, to do that select Key Management again, you have three options. One option is to send the public key by email, another options is to send the Public Key as a file and the last is to upload the Public Key to a key sever. For now just use Send Public Key by Email option, select the email of the person or persons and send. In the attachment sections you will see the public key, it will be numbers and letter with an .ase extension. When the person gets the email they will save the attachment into there PGP key folder and from then on they can send messages to you encrypted.
Sending encrypted E-mail is quite easy from then on. Select Write then enter the email address, from the OpenPGP menu select Encrypt Message, enter your Subject and message then click Send, you may be asked to verify the recipient public key then it will send the message. When the message is received open the OpenPGP pull down and select Decrypt/Verify, it will ask for the password to your private key and then will decrypt the message. And the good part is it is only decrypted when you want to see it, all the others times is encrypted.
Its sad you have to do this to protect your self from unreasonable intrusion by the government and business but..$fdRuyde^%7gde43%ynb(4sCX234gmq093467v%$dffg4^&=asw
Secure between you and others – Encryption
Picture a world where complete strangers know the personal information you send to your family, everything you send to someone else, is copied and viewed to make sure you are not a threat to the society. This sadly is what seems to be happening more and more lately, but if you are diligent there are things you can do to keep your information private.
With his group of entries I will explain how to use encryption of email between you and another person to keep the information out of prying eyes. The idea is simple, being able to send and receive mail between you and another knowing that even if the traffic is sniffed and the data is captured it will be secure for a while, I say this because as technology evolves it will at some point be able to DE-crypt the message, but most likely far in the distant future long after you and most of the human race is gone. The idea is to keep the length of time long enough so it does not matter if they do DE-crypt it because the information will no longer be useful. I will discuss using Thunderbird, GnUPG (PGP) and enigma mail plugin as my E-mail and encryption programs. There are others that will be added as time goes on. This set of entry’s will cover securing your E-mails from others, they being your ISP’s, data miners and even your own Government. We could talk all day about the idea that if your not doing anything you have nothing to hide, but will just leave it as the only ones that need to read it is you and the person you are sending it to, no one else.
What is Public key Encryption –
Why think about encryption? If you have nothing to hide then you don’t need to use it, do you? Just some of the questions that people put forth when you say you want to encrypt stuff between you and the other person only. Security is a right not a privilege, what is exchanged between you and the person should only be known between you and the person. There are many ways to encrypt messages, the one I will describe is called public key encryption.
The idea is that Bob and Alice want to exchange messages and do not want John to be able to see them. The problem is that the only method is a media that can be sniffed that is the traffic can be viewed. Think of the postal carrier: you put the mail in the mail box and the letter going into a public system that can be looked at if one wishes. To prevent that public, key cryptology was created. The way to think about it is that each of you have two types of mathematically defined keys. Both of the keys are created at the same time. One key you keep and one your give away, that may sound strange but here is why. You use the public key to encrypt and only encrypt the message, by knowing the public key you can not decrypt the message. When you get the encrypted message you use your private key and only your private key to decrypt it. The private key can be used to know it is you and only you that will read the message. Each private and public key are a matched set and if they are tampered with they will no longer work together. (the deep workings are at this time a bit beyond the scope of this but maybe I will do a special posting explaining it deeper)
Now back to Bob and Alice’s message exchange problem, Bob wants to send Alice a message that only Alice will be able to read, One way this could be done is to have both of them use the same password to encrypt the message, the problem is how do you exchange the password if they never are able to see meet each other directly. This is were the public key comes in, this is a lock that can be publicly given out that can be used to encrypt a message by anyone. But only the recipient has the private key to decrypt the message. The first thing they do is create a combination of private and public key, this means that the public key can be used to lock the box but only the private or secret key can be used to unlock the box.. So after they both create there public/private keys they can do one of many ways to exchange the public keys. They can send them to a central key server that holds the keys so Bob can search for Alice’s public key, Alice can just send Bob the public key in E-mail, if they are really paranoid, Alice can send the key one letter at a time to Bob and he can convert it for use, long way but it does work. Lets say Bob get the key from Alice some way, Bob would then take the message and put it in the box and lock the box with Alice’s lock and send the box to Alice, this box is unbreakable when the lock is added. Alice upon getting the box would use her private key to unlock the box and view the message. Bob could put his private key into the box so Alice can verify the message was from Bob. Simple but you should now get the general idea, some questions could be how does Bob know the private key is from Alice and not John and vice versa.
Deeper reading of you like
www.gnupg.org
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy
http://www.openpgp.org/
http://www.pgpi.org/
http://www.pgpi.org/doc/pgpintro/
http://pgp.mit.edu/
http://philzimmermann.com/EN/findpgp/
Tor – the onion router
Anonymity is a right.
With this entry I am going to talk about a way to protect your true ip address from being logged when you surf the web.
I will discuss a program/service called tor, or “the Onion router.” Tor is a systems that will hide your IP location data as it travels along the internet from prying eyes. It can also be used to send data in a general encrypted form from you to another. When you go to websites your IP address is protected because the site does not know were you truly came from.
More and more companies and governments are using your IP address to track you and your behavior for their own personal use, good and evil. With tor your IP address is cloaked and in doing so much of your surfing habits are protected as well. The service was originally created to allow activists in repressive countries to be able to communicate information or discussions that the government would not want to be known, and not be worried that they would be found out, in some countries their lives would depend on them being anonymous.
The service is quite easy to set up and the more people that use it the better it gets. The current service installs all you need in one directory and runs from that directory only. Here is a little background of tor and how it works. The “onion” part is the fact that it uses different software routers set up by people to send each packet along. Each time it sends data it sends it encrypted and in a different direction using different routers. This is a strength but also creates a weakness, because at times can be slow. With tor as more people use the system the security increases for everyone because there are more routers which allows more random packet directions. First off you may be saying to yourself, how do I know that the routers are not tracking my data? Even if there may be some people/governments that have hacked the routers and are logging the packets that travel along their routers at that one time, its the random nature that will protect you, each time it will be different path that is used.
Here is a simple three step visual description from the tor web site.
To set up tor go to https://www.torproject.org/ and down load the “Tor browser Bundle” for your OS, Linux, Windows, OSX or smart-phones. Install it the start the router program, after a few moments it will open up a browser and let you know your are now browsing the web with your IP hidden for the sites you connect to. If you are worried about installing the software on your system there are two new options called “Tails”, that allow you to create a Live USB or Live DVD so no software is loaded on your machine. You just boot from the USB or DVD and run tor from the independent original operation system. Reboot and the live systems is gone without a trace. This is nice if you are at temp locations/machines and want to have some protection but leave no trace. I recommend you go to the tor web site and brows the “About Tor” section if you still have more questions.
Thanks and safe surfing.
Note if the images are not being displayed – here is the links to them
https://www.torproject.org/images/htw1.png
https://www.torproject.org/images/htw2.png
https://www.torproject.org/images/htw3.png
IM encryption with pidgin and OTR plugin
In this entry I will discuss secure IM. For this discussion I will talk about pidgin and how to add some secure encryption. This will allow you to talk with another person and be reasonably sure that you are will not be snooped. As all security and encryption, there may be as yet unknown bugs or ways to access the data, some may be from a side channel. Depending on your operating system you will need pidgin, you will also need a plugin called OTR. The OTR plugin does most of the work in securing the encryption between you and the other IM client. I will also talk about a few other plugin that may be kind of nice to have enabled.
First off you need download and install pidgin for your system. To do that go to http://www.pidgin.im/ and select the version for your system. There also is a sections along the top called Plugins, select that and you will get a list of plugin options. Find the “Security and Privacy” section and select “Off-the-Record Messaging”. Down load the plugin for your system, and install them both, pidgin first of course.
What is OTR? Off-the-record, its a cryptographic protocol that provides encryption for instance messaging conversations. This allows deniability and confidential message exchange. It uses multi-key exchange hash functions, that is it uses a mix of mathematical keys to encrypt the messages between each of the recipients on the IM exchange.
Now lets get started setting up the secure connections. First thing you need to do after you set up your IM account in pidgin is to set up the “Off-the-record” plugin private key. To do this go to the Plugins sections and select “Off-the-record Messaging” then select “Configure Plugin”. There is a new dialog box that will open, from here click on the “Generate” button to generate a private key fingerprint. It should after a bit of time generate a 40 letter/number key combination, it may take a bit of time depending on the speed of your machine. On this page also there are some other options you may want to set. I would recommend setting “Enable private messaging”, “Don’t log OTR conversations” and “Automatically initiate private messaging”. You can also set “Require private messaging” if you know the other person is using OTR as well, if you set this and they do not it will not connect (in future versions that will change to allow non default encrypted connection). There are other plugins you may want to play with so go for it.
To start a conversations, select the person you want to IM, there is a button in the lower right sections that will default to “Not private”. Click on the button and select “Start Private Conversation”. It will change to one of four options, “Not Private”, “Private”, “Unverified” and ”Finished”. Not private is just that, all exchanges are in clear text. Private means you and the person you are connection have been authenticated and not an impostor. Your exchanges are now encrypted and visible only to the other person not a third party that may be sniffing the traffic. This is not to say it is a guarantee because the technology may be found to break the keys, but for now they should be safe. Unverified means you are getting an encrypted feed but the key can not be fully verified, there may be someone acting as the other person. The last is Finished, this means the other person has change the setting to “Not private”, this prevents the other person from accidentally sending a message they think is encrypted.
Now you have a secure connection between you and the other person. The questions you still need to ask yourself is, “is the rest of the machine secure?” More on that later.
The DNS problem Monday 7/9/2012
Wanted to post a bit of a clear up for all the poor description and hype that most of the media is saying in regards to Mondays shutting down of the FBI usages of infected servers that will be causing some issues to people.
First of all it will not as some news outlets have been saying “Preventing you from accessing the internet” it will also not prevent you connecting to your ISP. It will work irregardless of Monday, unless of course your ISP is having issues, they do from time to time, its normal. All that is happening is your DNS requests, those are the requests that transfer the name of a site to its IP or address number will not work. What you may get is a site not found or location not found error, depending on your web browser, (Firefox, IE, Safari, etc.). For example if you go to www.google.com your DNS will change the info to 67.345.22.34 for example so it can be routed to Google. To fix this it is quite easy, go into your DNS settings and make sure they are defined for you ISP or you can use some public third party, and in some cases more stable DNS servers like OpenDNS, GoogleDNS, etc. I will at the end of this posting list a few of them you can use.
For Linux,
Generally edit your resolv.conf and put the proper entry’s in them, some Linux’s have programs that you run, so that others you can just edit the file directly.
For OSX,
Select the Systems Preferences application, then select the Network icon (looks like a little circle with lines in it), you should see entries like AirPort, Ethernet, FireWire. Select the connection you are using then select the connect properties. A new window should open with DNS button along the bar. Using the + or – keys enter or remove the DNS entry’s, you must have the “.” between each set of numbers then select OK to save.
For Windows,
This may be a bit different depending on your version of windows, go to the Control Panel, then select Network Connections and select local network. Click the Properties, then select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). Click on Properties, in the lower section of the dialog box you will see Preferred DNS and Alternate DNS box’s. Enter the numbers in the box. you may have to click on the “Use the following DNS server address:” button. the click “OK” and your done.
Here is a bit of advanced setting.- cool to know but not super important to change.
You can use a file called a “hosts” to enter names and IP addresses out side of the DNS service. the file is called hosts, you will need to look at your systems to find it. Some are in /etc others are in C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc\. Its a simple text file, you enter the IP address and the name and it will be read first before checking with the DNS servers. If you don’t understand this then don’t worry you don’t need to change anything.
Some of the public DNS site ID’s you can use
for OpenDNS its – 208.67.220.220 and 208.67.222.222
for googleDNS its – 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4
That’s all for now
Happy surfing
Passwords and file encryption
In this entry I will cover some quick and simple ideas that you can do right now to protect your online presence.
First and perhaps the most important one is the passwords that you use for different places, yes I do mean using different passwords for different sites you log into. Don’t use the same password for everything. If you have been watching the news lately there have been a number of places that have “lost control” of their password file to hackers. I will admit it is a bit more work, but would you rather change only one password if the account has had the password stolen or multiple accounts?
There are programs that will secure your lists of passwords with a password so you only need to remember one to decrypt them. You may say what is the difference between having one password for all accounts and one password for the password holder?. First off you are more likely to have it on a machine that is password protected in the first place, and they will need to know you have a password file there. Most “hackers” are more interested in selling the machine or doing a quick look on what is there then digging deeply into it. It may be true that they may dig deeper for corporate treasures and if that is true it is hoped that your IT has steps and options in place to secure that, more on that later.
The next issue is the type and lengths of the password. There are many papers written about this and many different ideas. As a standard idea, the longer the better, but as long as you do not use dictionary words you can use a little as six letters for the password. As a general rule having special characters like ” @#$%*^$” will make the passwords harder to crack, sadly some systems will not allow these, so if you can, use them.
On the subject of cracking passwords you may have wonders how they do that? If the password encrypting program is well written then most of the time it is easy to encrypt the password but hard to decrypt. There are large databases call “rainbow tables” that have passwords already created and the hackers will take the database and search for a match, so they do not need to decrypt it just match it to a pre-created list. Adding special characters will make the time needed to crack it cost more than the data is worth. That is the key, once it is not cost effective then they will just wipe the machine and sell the hardware.
On the idea of passwords and encryption of passwords, I also want to touch on having your machine use a password to log into and not have it just auto-boot into your account. It may be a nice feature but if it is stolen then your data is open to all. With that being said and you still want to have it auto login to your account then you should at least encrypt the files you want no one to have access to. Setting up a space to save files in an encrypted form will depend on your operating system.
I will start with OSX first because it is the easiest. If you use OSX, it has an option to create an encrypted disk image. Think of it like a folder that will store the files, you then mount the folder like a drive. To create the encrypted image select and launch “Disk Utility” its in the Utilities folder under Applications, Select New Image, Choose a name for your image, then choose the size of the image, I would keep it under 4Gig because any larger you would not be able to burn the image to a DVD. Look for the encryption setting and select 128 or 256 AES its up to you, the higher the number the slower it will be to encrypt the data depending on your machine. Many new machines are fast enough for the higher number. You can also select the locations to create the image, leave the rest of the settings as they are. Select Create and an Authenticate dialog box will appear, give it a password and then retype it for verification. Use a strong password for this, that is numbers letters and the mix. To mount the file just click on it and it will ask you for a password, after you enter the correct password it will mount just like a standard OSX drive.
If you use Linux, Windows or OSX there is a third party application called “truecrypt” it is free, but I would ask you give a donation to them if you would please. I like the program because it open source, that means you can look at the source code for your own personal feel good that there are no backdoors in it. Also it has been look at by many others and there seems to be no security issues. It is on the same lines of having a single encrypted image that you store your files in. I am not going to go into all the features at this time. I will have a full posting at a later date with some cool security features. For this posting it will only go into creating a simple encrypted disk image. First down load the program for you systems from http://www.truecrypt.org/downloads. Select the OS you use and install onto your system. Start TrueCrypt, select Volumes, Create New Volume, keep the Create and encrypted file container selected, click next leaving the Standard TrueCrypt volume open marked. Click Next again and give the volume a name then select Next. For now you can leave the Encryption Algorithm set to AES and the Hash Algorithm set to RIPEMD-160 as well. Select Next and give it a size I would say 4GB max for this so you can burn it to a DVD if wished. you can experiment later with different sizes. Select Next and give it a password, it may give you an error if it thinks the password is to short or easy crack-able you can disregard it but try to create a strong one. Click Next again and give it a format type, the select FAT file system is fine for now, click Next again the Volume Format dialog box will be showing random numbers, move your mouse in the box for a while to create a random set of key numbers, then click Next to create the volume, it will say Volume Create at this point click Exit. It will bring you back to the start screen, to mount the created volume. Make sure one of the slots is highlighted. Click Select File and click on the file you created, select mount and it will ask you for the password then mount the file. Add the files to the mounted volume after done, just un-mount it and it will close.
I Think that is plenty for now so enjoy
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