Re: How do you store/protect your hentai?
I know this has been dead for years, but I felt compelled to answer. Most of what everyone has said so far has been fairly rudimentary as far as securing your data goes, such as just hiding your stuff in an inconspicuous folder. Anyone with a bit of know-how and the time could find your stuff with security that simple(such as nosy siblings). Of course, some people don't need to work really hard to hide their stuff since they're the only person that has any access to it, but for those people that have to share a computer, you might want something more reliable.
What I use is a program called "Folder Lock". It's a security program that allows you to make "vaults" of any predetermined size which operate as an additional drive on your computer that uses the space of your main drive. Naturally, this program allows you to password protect your vaults along with the entire program itself. The way it works is by having two passwords. One for the program, and one for the vault. The "master password", or the one for the entire program, is your first line of defense and only as strong as you make it. You could just as easily make it an elaborate phrase as you could the name of your dog. By typing this in you get access to the program, but not necessarily your vaults. In order to do that, you would then have to type in the vaults own unique password before finally getting to your stuff.
This is all great, but any tech-savvy person with the time could still break in if you weren't careful. To avoid this, the program employs several stealth and protection features, such as hiding the program from the taskbar, requiring the master password to uninstall the program, auto-protection after extended time of inactivity, hack security to prevent someone from just randomly typing in passwords, keylogger protection through use of a virtual keyboard, and, finally, stealth mode. Stealth mode causes the program to hide almost all signs of its existence from the computer, including all shortcuts and files. Alongside this, you can set Folder Lock to only open when you press a special selection of keys to prevent unwanted users from even opening the program, let alone attempt to guess the passwords.
And as the final icing on the cake, each vault is protected by a 256-bit AES encryption. What this means is that it would take several times longer than the entire age of the universe to brute force that kind of encryption as there are 1.1 * 10^77 possible combinations. Sooooo, good luck cracking that.
If Folder Lock wasn't already the best, it just got better as the program also allows you to place vaults on USB flash drives to make them portable, so you can access your data where ever you are.
Essentially, at this point, what I'm trying to say is that the only way someone could break in and find your stuff would be because of user error(such as leaving the vault open for anyone to find). Sure, some technical genius could come along and try to hack your vault; it would just take longer than the collective age of every organism to ever live. =)