this post was submitted on 23 Sep 2024
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Hey everyone! :)

I am currently looking to replace Obsidian with a self-hostable alternative (that preferably also uses Markdown - but it's not a must) but instead of storing the files directly on disk has a way to have all the files within in an encrypted vault / binary format.

Reason being I have very very sensitive data that needs to be stored (employee & medically related).

I read that Logseq used to support this feature but it has since been deprecated, some light googling didn't surface any results other than that so I would be delighted if anyone had any suggestions!

Thanks so much in advance for any and all help! :)

edit: Forgot to mention that it needs to support Linux as well as Android

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[–] HamalaKarris@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

In my mind at least this would be solved by the "vault" needing to be decrypted with a password every time notes are accessed/saved with the password acting as the key? I'm not terribly well educated on encryption though.

[–] aurelian@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The problem is how many random characters can you remember in your head?

A good encryption key would be around 32 characters to form a 256 bit encryption key.

You can do a fun game of encrypt the encryption key with a password but that's just another vulnerability in the chain.

I recommend getting a PGP key stored on a yubikey and then encrypt all your notes with it since it's all in markdown, I store my notes on Google drive and keep them decrypted in memory so that I can still use Obsidian.

[–] DaGeek247@fedia.io 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Or just use a password manager like keepass where the problem of storing passwords has been solved already...

[–] aurelian@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

As long as you protect that password store with a sufficiently strong password that you store in a password manager that has a sufficiently strong password :P

I joke but yes some sort of password store is what you would use but make sure that password store needs something like a yubikey with a strong private key on it ^⁠_⁠^

[–] mark@infosec.pub 2 points 1 month ago

if you want to type the key yourself each time this could work. I'm not aware of an app that does this but it wouldn't be too hard I don't think.