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Password-Protect Your Hard Drive

February 3rd, 2009 @ 8:00 pm

3 Comments

Categories: Computers

Tags: Hard Drive, Password, BIOS, Hardware, Components, Dave Johnson

Your Windows password may stop unsavory characters from accessing your data in your office, but what happens if your PC gets stolen? Then it’s a simple matter to remove your hard drive and read all your confidential data through another computer.

PC World says that one way to keep your data safe is to password protect the hard drive itself.

The article explains how to change password settings in your PC’s BIOS to protect the system at a deeper level than Windows allows. After entering the BIOS by pressing the proper key combo at startup (often F1, F2, Delete, or Escape), here are the two settings I think you should zero in on:

Supervisor Password. Enable this password to prevent someone from changing your BIOS settings behind your back. This can allow you to disable booting from a CD, for example, and make sure no one changes that setting to gain access to your PC.

HDD Password. This is the important one. Enable the hard disk password to prevent access to your data even if your hard drive gets installed in another PC. Just don’t forget this password, or you’ll have to take it to a data recovery service to retrieve your data. Photo by Jeff Kubina

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    1

    KAuditWright

    02/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Password-Protect Your Hard Drive

    Also, for airtight security on hard drives and thumbdrives, try True Crypt. True Crypt allows you to specify a certain number of hardrive or thumbdrive space to place on lockdown. Say, you want to only secure 250 gigs of your 500 gig hard drive. You simply follow the setup wizard and voila. Now you can save certain documents within the secured space of your hard drive.
    Oh, and the best thing is that it is OpenSource (Free). Simply visit www.truecrypt.org and download the tool.

  •  
    2

    normcads

    02/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Password-Protect Your Hard Drive

    If you forget your HDD password, but can take it to a data recovery service to get the data, then tell me how this is secure? I've got to believe that there's a data recovery service for the bad guys, too...

  •  
    3

    BizHacks Dave

    02/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Password-Protect Your Hard Drive

    True, normcads. I suppose it all boils down to how important the data is, and how much the bad guys want it. If it's the secret ingredients in KFC chicken, maybe it's worth $2000 to recover the data. If it's yor business plan for a startup day care facility for monkeys, maybe the bad guys won't bother investing much money in extracting that.

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