After the reboot of system it is necessary to run through the Configuration Wizard to enable the features within Symantec Encryption Desktop that you wish to use. 



After the Reboot - Walking through the Setup Assistant


1. First, a wizard will be displayed and will ask to enable the encryption software on the computer. Select Yes.

2. Click Next until the License Window appears. The License number that is needed is a 28-digit string of numbers and letters and was mentioned in the section:

In case you're wondering why I'm trying to do this, I am also attempting to set up an encrypted mail client on my mobile phone. I imported the original certificate into that client, but for some reason, can't decrypt e-mail that has been sent to me using the public key generated within SED from the imported certificate. I suspect that SED has done something in order to "convert" the certificate into an equivalent PGP key pair, if that makes any sense, so am attempting to export that key pair to import into the encryption software on my phone, assuming that makes any sense.


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- I have already imported the pfx into the e-mail encryption app on my phone. I have not imported the pfx into the phone certificate store. Interestingly, while I can send an encrypted e-mail using my phone, which I can then read on Outlook using SED, I can't read an encrypted e-mail on my phone which is sent from Outlook using SED.

Symantec Encryption Desktop Corporate provides flexible, multi-layered encryption by bundling Drive Encryption to secure the files stored on local hard drives, Desktop Email Encryption to secure confidential data in email, and File Share Encryption to securely share files with selected colleagues and in the cloud.

That's definitely quite the specific use-case, but I can totally see why you'd really want to use auto-type here. Auto-type uses Windows to emulate keyboard events, but with a program focused on desktop security in the mix, there are any number of reasons it might be prevented from working. If Symantec Encryption Desktop is running in an elevated state or otherwise segregating itself from the rest of your system (think secure desktop), or even just blocking foreign keystrokes, it may not work. You're right that I, at least, am not familiar with this specific Symantec product, so I won't be of much use with tweaking things, but I hope understanding a bit more about how auto-type works under the hood might give you some ideas of things to try. :+1:

Solution 1 - PGP Encryption Solutions


PGP Encryption Server

This is the management server piece that will manage the PGP Encryption Desktop clients on the PGP side. 

It can also perform automatic email encryption when deployed in "Gateway Mode", which has many additional features for secure email delivery.

When the client is installed, a user is enrolled (either by the end user themselves, or invisibly depending on which option is chosen) and once enrollment is completed, the drive encryption process will start.

All PGP Encryption products interop with any other encryption solution that use the OpenPGP standard. 


With Symantec Encryption, we invented the standard, so as long as other solutions that use OpenPGP do so using standard methods, PGP can interop with many other encryption solutions just fine.

PGP Encryption Desktop can run as a "standalone" product and all the features available can be used as a standalone client and does not require configuring a server to use this product. Although it is possible to manage the PGP client (PGP Encryption Desktop) by the server, it is not necessary in order to obtain the installer and get started with encryption. In this way, if you need to encrypt only a few machines and do not need to manage any of the components with a server, PGP is likely the best choice. The standalone MSI file can be downloaded directly from the Broadcom Support Portal.

With Symantec Endpoint Encryption, the client is managed on a "per machine" basis. This means that when the client is installed, the machine itself can automatically start encrypting without any user intervention--in fact, once the SEE Client is installed, upon reboot, even if the user does not login to the system, encryption will start. Once the user logs in, the user is registered to the drive encryption piece and associated to the machine. When a Drive Encryption recovery key is needed, the Encryption Administrator will search for the machine (rather than the user), and display the recovery key for the machine. The SEE Client will always have a recovery key even if the SEE Client never connects to the server. All policy applied to the machine itself, not the user.


Symantec Endpoint Encryption requires the SEE Management Server as the SEE Client must be generated by the server itself. The reason for this is SEE embeds encryption keys into the client and is a completely unique installer for each deployment. Due to this unique client creation, SEE enjoys "Connectionless Recovery". Connectionless Recovery allows a system to be encrypted and even if the client never contacts the server, a recovery key can be generated for the clients. This makes the SEE client a very attractive option when it comes to Drive Encryption, something few encryption solutions offer.

Both of the above encryption solutions that Symantec Enterprise Division offers will allow client management, but the management functionality is different here. 


The table below displays the major feature differences at a glance between the two encryption solutions, and we will explain in more detail the different features for each solution:

Two questions: does anyone have the latest version of Symantec (broadcom?) PGP Encryption Desktop with drive encryption? A trial version? The latest version I can find is 10.4.2 but this version does not work with WIndows 11. Anyone have a vendor that is easy to deal with that services the west coast?

Hi

after my recent upgrade of my PGPencryption-Symantec Encryption Desktop Professional 10.4.2 HF1 to "Symantec Encryption Desktop Professional 10.4.2 MP2" the MBAMservice.exe stops from loading, and my Malwarebytes Premium 3.7.1 v.2839 does not work good. Couldn't work around it myself, so I placed back my backup-system-image to the point where all was okay, working with [Symantec Encryption Desktop Professional 10.4.2 HF1]

I hope you can help to find a solution

((ps: this was the first time ever that Malwarebytes had problems with the PGP-Symantec encryption software))

Your data deserves protection. The UIC license for Symantec Encryption Desktop provides easy to use and secure encryption to protect sensitive data on your laptop or desktop computers. Laptops are easily lost, and even desktop computers can be stolen. Symantec Encryption Desktop also includes a secure shredder, to really delete files you want to delete. A major motivation for using Symantec Encryption Desktop is to fulfill HIPAA requirements.

You may have heard of PGP -- Pretty Good Privacy -- in the context of encrypting electronic mail and email attachments, and digitally signing email messages. That is not what the UIC license for Symantec Encryption Desktop/PGP Desktop is for. Symantec Encryption Desktop provides easy to use and secure encryption to protect sensitive data on your laptop, PC, or removable media. Laptops and flash drives are easily lost, and even desktop computers can be stolen. Symantec Encryption Desktop also includes a secure shredder, to really delete files you want to delete.

The UIC license for Symantec Encryption Desktop centers on Symantec Drive Encryption (formerly known as PGP Whole Disk Encryption / WDE) which securely encrypts the entire contents of your laptop or desktop, including boot sectors, system, and swap files. After you install Symantec Encryption Desktop on your computer, the disk encryption process will automatically run on its hard drive. After your hard disk is encrypted, you must login to Symantec Encryption Desktop before you can boot the computer. Operating system login bypass tricks won't work.

After you authenticate and your computer boots, encryption is always on, automatically protecting your data. But it is also transparent. This "transparency" means that your computer works exactly as it always did after you boot, but it also means that the files you use are not protected when your computer is on, after you authenticate with Symantec Encryption Desktop. So there are three additional things you need to do to protect your computer:

The Technology Solutions runs a Symantec Encryption Management Server for UIC. The Symantec Encryption Management Server provides central administration of encryption applications, creation and delivery of configuration policy, reporting and logging, and management of PGP private and public keys.

My machine has it's whole disk encrypted with Symantec PGP technology, the one that brings up the grey screen for a password before the operating system boots. Can I reformat the hard drive, and re-install the operating system without removing the encryption first?

As far as I recall, when Symantec Encryption Desktop creates a PGP file, it is also zipping. This is how I used the Symantec Command Line API tool, as I would select multiple files for encryption and they would end up in a single file (like a zip).

Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) is an encryption program that provides cryptographic privacy and authentication for data communication. PGP is used for signing, encrypting, and decrypting texts, e-mails, files, directories, and whole disk partitions and to increase the security of e-mail communications. Phil Zimmermann developed PGP in 1991.[3]

PGP encryption uses a serial combination of hashing, data compression, symmetric-key cryptography, and finally public-key cryptography; each step uses one of several supported algorithms. Each public key is bound to a username or an e-mail address. The first version of this system was generally known as a web of trust to contrast with the X.509 system, which uses a hierarchical approach based on certificate authority and which was added to PGP implementations later. Current versions of PGP encryption include options through an automated key management server. 17dc91bb1f

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