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|    Daniel70 to micky    |
|    Re: Any point to password protecting the    |
|    20 Jan 26 19:57:44    |
      XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-10       From: daniel47@nomail.afraid.org              On 20/01/2026 1:44 pm, micky wrote:       > Any point to password protecting the bios if only 3 people in the       > household, and 2 know nothing about bioses?              So one person is protecting their computer from themselves. Not much use!              However, if you were wanting to protect your Data from so burglar ....       then maybe!! (if you are a pessimist!!)              If you were wanting to protect your data from someone who is       semi-computer literate, then Password Protecting might be useful ....       but then, all your burglar would need would be a USB drive with Linux       installed on it.              > I just finished a 40 minute phone call iwth a 37 yo friend, the son of       > friends, who is locked in the mental ward of a nearby hospital and who       > has such problems for at least 18 years,. And his words were indeed       > full of craziness, but i need to show that I take his wishes seriously,       > even if I don't actually fulfill them.       >       > But I need advice:       >       > Is there any point to password protecting the BIOS on a windows machine       > if you live only with your parents who love you (although he's having       > doubts abou that now), and who also wouldn't know how to modify the BIOS       > either to break it or to fix it even if they tried. IOW, who know       > nothing about the BIOS.       >       > I see why he password protected windows, for privacy, but it seems to me       > he's just looking for trouble with the BIOS, in that he may forget his       > own password. Woudn't that be a big problem? Well, I guess maybe even       > that woudln't matter because if it's currently set correctly now, the       > computer will continue to work, even if some change is later       > recommended, right?       >       > He told me the passwords and I wrote them down. Is it still likely I can       > easily remove the BIOS password now, so it doesn't cause problems in the       > future (this assumes I will at some point touch his computer, which is       > not very likely, but again, I want him to know I take him seriously       > (when it's possible, and here it seems possible).)       >       --       Daniel70              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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