My question isn't just abstract security paranoia. Most wifi passwords don't really matter.
But my university in its wisdom uses a one-per-user username/password combo for *everything*.
So someone who gets my work wifi password can also change student grades and redirect
my paycheck. (There is 2FA for some things, but still.) And I can't do anything about this policy.
So I'd rather not have that particular password stored in a VM which qubes expects to be subverted.
I don't think this is paranoia, just part of the data-flow thinking that qubes users are expected to do.
I like your suggestion for a separate usb wifi device. Then when I want to connect at work I would
just change the networking VM for sys-firewall from sys-net to sys-net-work. Would appreciate any
pointers to docs helpful for actually doing this. (Haven't delved into the usb system yet.)
And still open for suggestions from all, to my original broader question as well as the current how-to-protect-a-single-wifi-password question.
Best,
Daniel
Impressed not only by qubes itself but also the help two strangers have offered.
Though it may be just a noob opinion, it seems like a reasonable idea to have sys-net be disposable, so
that every time you start it you know you are getting something clean. Inter-VM communication then needed
to store credentials. Of course it is easy to say such things.....! :)
Daniel