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attributes, or the operating system failing to perform it for various documented and
undocumented reasons). Note: When you write to a file-hosted hidden volume, the timestamp
of the container may change. This can be plausibly explained
as having been caused by
changing the (outer) volume password. Also note that TrueCrypt never preserves timestamps
of system favorite volumes (regardless of the settings).
•
Special software (e.g., a low-level disk editor) that writes data to a disk drive in a way that
circumvents drivers in the driver stack of the class ‘DiskDrive’ (GUID of the class is 4D36E967-
E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318) can write unencrypted data to a non-system drive hosting a
mounted TrueCrypt volume (‘Partition0’) and to encrypted partitions/drives that are within the
key scope of active system encryption (TrueCrypt does not encrypt such data written that way).
Similarly, software that writes data to a disk drive circumventing drivers in
the driver stack of
the class ‘Storage Volume’ (GUID of the class is 71A27CDD-812A-11D0-BEC7-
08002BE2092F) can write unencrypted data to TrueCrypt partition-hosted volumes (even if
they are mounted).
•
For security reasons, when a hidden operating system is running, TrueCrypt ensures that all
local unencrypted filesystems and non-hidden TrueCrypt volumes are read-only. However, this
does not apply to filesystems on CD/DVD-like media and on custom, atypical,
or non-standard
devices/media (for example, any devices/media whose class is other than the Windows device
class ‘Storage Volume’ or that do not meet the requirements of this class (GUID of the class is
71A27CDD-812A-11D0-BEC7-08002BE2092F)).
•
Device-hosted TrueCrypt volumes located on floppy disks are not supported. Note: You can
still create file-hosted TrueCrypt volumes on floppy disks.
•
Further limitations are
listed in the section
Security Model
.