this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
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You have no control over how an adversary accesses the drive, so no.
However, if it's enough to erase the data if wrong key is entered AND the original operating system is running it should be possible. But I agree, that limitation doesn't really make sense in a security point of view.
Besides that, I believe that luks encryption with sufficiently complex password (and updates) is practically the same than empty drive for the attacker. More interesting setup would be to give out different data depending on which key is given, there was some windows-based software which could do that back in the day, I'm not sure if it's still around and don't remember the name for it right now.
It would at least add a layer of obfuscation if someone extorts a key from the owner.