


The program starts with a double click on the crypto file and asks for the password for the archive before the files are decrypted. Since the tool is also available for Windows, you can open the encrypted archive on the PC after installation and save the data from it. Of course, the archive has nothing to oppose a brute force attack, but let's assume that you only want to encrypt medium-important data with it and not the blueprints of Fort Knox. If the password is not entered correctly, the archive remains a heap of data garbage that is provided with AES-265 encryption - so pretty much useless for anyone who gets their hands on it without authorization and does not know what the password is. If you choose a weak password, the whole AES-256 encryption is of no use.
