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Hard drive encryption is an integral step for anyone looking to secure their data. It is a process which will go a step beyond regular password security and will ensure that a hard drive remain secure only to the user. However, it is important to note that once a hard drive is encrypted, ITS can not remove the encryption so any files that cannot be accessed may remain that way until the user themselves can access them. 

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Info

In versions 10.6 and 10.7 drive encryption should be accessible in the Disk Utility which can be found in your Applications/Utilities Folder. This drive encryption will ask you to erase your drive.

 

right click the drive and select the encrypt optionImage Modified

From here select the Encrypt option.

you must choose a password for encryptionImage Modified

You will be presented with this window. Here, you can type the password you want to set for your drive and a hint that may help you remember it. 

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Type in your password and hint and press Encrypt Disk

select encrypt diskImage Modified


 

Info

Note: If you run into this error, use this fix to correct it. This WILL erase your drive.

Open up the Disk Utility in your Applications/Utilities folder, select your drive and click on the partition tab

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Click options to select "GUID Partition Table" and click apply.

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To check whether your drive has been encrypted or not, simply right click on the drive in your finder or your desktop and press Get Info

you will be able to tell if the driver is encrypted under the format sectionImage Modified

You will see that under the drive description it now says Encrypted

Now if you remove your drive and re-insert it, OSX will ask for a password.

prompted to input password when re-inserting driveImage Modified

To remove the encryption simply right click on the drive and select Decrypt

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Insert your drive, find it either in your sidebar in Windows Explorer, or in your Computer menu and right click it. From there, select Turn on BitLocker.

turn on bitlocker by right clicking your driveImage Modified

You will be greeted by the BitLocker screen. 

bitlocker initializing screenImage Modified

You can now select options to encrypt your drive. We will be using password protection today.

 prompt to choose how to unlock your driveImage Modified

Note: Your password MUST include an Uppercase letter, a Lowercase letter, and a number to be compatible. 

Click next when you're ready to continue. 

backing up your recovery keyImage Modified

BitLocker also requires you to backup a recovery key which can be used to recover the data from your flash drive if it ever happens that you forget your password. You must perform this step in order to continue. 

you will choose how much of your drive you want encryptedImage Modified

These two options allow you to either format the drive and encrypt it quickly, or perform a slower encryption which will attempt to retain any data contained in the drive. 

click start encrypting if you are ready to continueImage Modified

You are given a small summary page before you are asked to continue, if any of these options are not to your liking simply press Cancel and start the process again. 

progress bar shows speed of encryptionImage Modified

The speed of the encryption depends on the size of the drive and which encryption option you chose. My 8GB drive took about 2 minutes to encrypt. 

Now if you remove and insert the hard drive you will be asked to enter a password, or you can enter a recovery key and have Windows automatically unlock the drive every time you insert it into the PC. 

prompt to enter passwordImage Modified

When you unlock the drive, it should look like this in your Computer. 

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If the default operating system encryption methods don't work for you or you want something a little more secure or efficient, there are a few other third-party applications out there for your convenience. Some recommendations include:

GNU Privacy Guard (WIndows, OSX, Linux) - Free

TrueCrypt (Windows, OSX, Linux) - Free

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