Don't mess up secure boot with bitlocker
Don't mess up secure boot with bitlocker
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Remember, always print your recovery code to pdf and save it to the same drive. This way, when it happens, you're forced to only use Linux.
62 0 ReplyI had this happen to me with a hardware-encrypted bitlocker drive. I was forced to buy a new SSD, actually.
7 1 ReplyYou couldn't reformat?
14 0 ReplyWhen using Opal (hardware encryption), it locks down the drive. Not even a secure erase would wipe/release the damn thing.
8 0 ReplySo this process didn't work? https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000037389/memory-and-storage/data-center-ssds.html
3 0 ReplyIt would have if I actually had the PSID 🥲
It was an expensive lesson to take photos of my new drives and store the PSID and serial numbers in KeePass.
2 0 Reply
I thought Windows wouldn't let you save it to the same drive? Its been a while, granted. But i had to plug in a USB or print it out.
4 1 ReplyIt is clever enough to not let you save the key to the same drive that’s encrypted. If you print to PDF the print dialogue box doesn’t care where you save the PDF.
22 0 ReplyAhh, never knew that!
1 0 Reply