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What setup should I use for someone who is certain to screw up?
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<blockquote data-quote="rndmblk" data-source="post: 940243" data-attributes="member: 89746"><p>Yes, they can.</p><p></p><p>You could prevent this by encrypting the drive with BitLocker. I think this can be confgured so the BitLocker password is only required to make changes to it, not at every boot as long as you have a chip called a TPM or I think you can set up a USB to do the same thing.</p><p></p><p>This probably goes even more into the 'moral' territory if you chose not to give someone the password to unencrypt their own drive</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rndmblk, post: 940243, member: 89746"] Yes, they can. You could prevent this by encrypting the drive with BitLocker. I think this can be confgured so the BitLocker password is only required to make changes to it, not at every boot as long as you have a chip called a TPM or I think you can set up a USB to do the same thing. This probably goes even more into the 'moral' territory if you chose not to give someone the password to unencrypt their own drive [/QUOTE]
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