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|    Message 163,811 of 164,974    |
|    Maria Sophia to Maria Sophia    |
|    Re: Microsoft gave FBI a set of Bitlocke    |
|    24 Jan 26 22:21:32    |
      XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-11       From: mariasophia@comprehension.com              Maria Sophia wrote:       > Note this means that if we're worried about the topic of this thread, and       > if we still wish to use bit locker, then we prolly' shouldn't be on Windows       > Home but on Windows Pro (or, as Paul & Bill suggested, use other tools).              In looking up what it meant to "use other tools", I wrote this PSA to help       people understand why Veracrypt is, in almost all situations, better'n       Bitlocker (but maybe some of my assumptions are wrong, so take a look)...              Winston wrote:       >> In summary, I think that Windows Home users do not have the same kind of       >> control over key storage that Windows Pro users have.       >       > At least, you're getting closer to the entire picture(Bitlocker       > Encryption is fully supported on Enterprise and Edu editions, too)              Thanks for the clarification, where I just opened a separate thread on why,       in my case of an older machine, and for consistency & greater protection       even on current Windows 11 Home versus Pro machines, Veracrypt has some       decisive FDE advantages over anything Microsoft marketing has provided us.               Subject: PSA: Veracrypt has pre boot authentication (& why it's better for       older PCs)        Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11,alt.c       mp.microsoft.windows        Date: Sat, 24 Jan 2026 21:51:50 -0500        Message-ID: <10l40g6$12r7$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com>              BitLocker Enterprise and Education editions work like BitLocker Pro because       they support pre boot PINs and full management of recovery keys. They still       depend on TPM features, so protection varies with the hardware. VeraCrypt       does not change across editions. It works the same on Home, Pro, Enterprise       and Education because it does not rely on Windows features and always uses       a password at boot.              Hence, there are security advantages of Veracrypt FDE for older PCs & for       consistency in mixed Windows environments even on the newer machines.              Older machines:        VeraCrypt is often a better fit for older desktops because it does        not need a TPM and always uses a password at boot, while BitLocker        Home and Pro rely on TPM features that many older machines do not have.              Mixed Home & Pro environments:        VeraCrypt full disk encryption is more consistent across mixed Windows        highly-marketed systems because it works the same on all hardware and        does not depend on TPM features. The more highly marketed BitLocker        arbitrarily behaves differently on Home and Pro, so protection varies        by edition, while VeraCrypt gives the same pre-boot password-based        security everywhere despite Microsoft's desperate marketing hype.       --       My reasoning favors simple models that account for all data points.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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