If you’ve signed in with a Microsoft account, your disk is likely already encrypted, and the key is likely already stored on ...
Microsoft says it may give your encryption key to law enforcement upon a valid request. Here's how to protect your privacy.
If your machine is uploading your BitLocker keys to Microsoft, it turns out Microsoft can and will give them to law ...
Some call Microsoft move "simply irresponsible" ...
If you're serious about encryption, keep control of your encryption keys updated If you think using Microsoft's BitLocker ...
Microsoft has confirmed that it provided BitLocker recovery keys to the FBI after receiving a valid legal demand tied to a federal investigation involving three laptops in Guam.
Encryption doesn’t guarantee privacy—key ownership does. This article explains how cloud-stored encryption keys let third parties unlock your data, exposing the hidden risks behind “secure” services ...
Microsoft stores the hard drive encryption key in customers' online accounts by default. It can be accessed with a court order.
Microsoft automatically uploads BitLocker recovery keys to the cloud, allowing FBI access via warrants as proven in recent ...
Microsoft stores the hard drive encryption key in customers' online accounts by default. It can be accessed there by court ...
Microsoft provided BitLocker recovery keys to the FBI after investigators served a valid warrant in a fraud investigation based in Guam. Federal agents believed ...
Microsoft has acknowledged that it can provide U.S. law enforcement agencies with access to BitLocker encryption keys when ...