Appletax
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 396
- Location
- Northern Michigan
Client brought me her Dell 22 3264 AIO because it was slow. It has a 7th gen i3 and an HDD. I steered her to getting a refurb from me that supports Win 11 and is massively faster. She wanted me to transfer her data to the new PC. To avoid the slowness, I booted live Ubuntu. When I tried to access the HDD, it asked for a passphrase to decrypt the drive. I rebooted so I could just use Windows to do the transfer and was greeted with a requirement to enter the BitLocker Recovery Key. Why would this happen? She does not have the key. Can't find it in her M$ Account.
I think Microsoft has been randomly turning on stripped down BitLocker encryption in Windows 10/11 Home editions without even telling the user.
I guess her only option for data recovery is to send the HDD to somewhere like $300 Data Recovery where the service fee is $420 + $20 return shipping + shipping for sending it to them + cost of another drive to transfer the data to.
Wow, what a nightmare. Microsoft has got to stop auto encrypting drives. Not everyone needs that and it just creates issues for those that are ignorant of it.
I think Microsoft has been randomly turning on stripped down BitLocker encryption in Windows 10/11 Home editions without even telling the user.
I guess her only option for data recovery is to send the HDD to somewhere like $300 Data Recovery where the service fee is $420 + $20 return shipping + shipping for sending it to them + cost of another drive to transfer the data to.
Wow, what a nightmare. Microsoft has got to stop auto encrypting drives. Not everyone needs that and it just creates issues for those that are ignorant of it.