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When a Mac with FileVault enabled starts up or restarts, a special login screen appears; only an authorized user account can get past this screen.
If you're a first-time Mac user or you just upgraded your device, these six steps are essential to protecting your device ...
When OS X Lion 10.7.4 appeared, it offered FileVault 2, full disk encryption (FDE), which protects your entire drive by using a special startup procedure at boot time that lets you log in to ...
If I have FileVault enabled on my Mac, what prevents someone from restarting with Command-R held down, and then use the "resetpassword" command to change the password and log into the system?
If you use Macs for business, you should be familiar with FileVault. Apple’s built-in disk encryption system for macOS can help protect corporate data.
Apparently the use of FileVault 2 along with Parallels Desktop on some MacBook Air systems may cause the systems to show the log-in screen twice when cold-booting.
FileVault is a security feature on a Mac that encrypts all the files and data. We take a look at how to encrypt and protect your data with FileVault on a Mac.
FileVault lets you encrypt your entire drive with a master password to protect key-chain passwords, files, and more. FileVault 2 uses a separate partition to store the FileVault login information.
FileVault 2 offers immense benefits for Apple enterprise customers with almost no downsides to IT or cause any end-user disruption.
Noticing that FileVault was now inactive on the new drive, I activated it and restarted. The computer stalled about midway through the login process.
The downside: When you log off your Mac with FileVault enabled, OS X asks if it can recover space from the dynamic disk image.