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Windows 11
Windows 11 incorrectly warns Local Security Authority protection is off
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<blockquote data-quote="a090" data-source="post: 1033991" data-attributes="member: 99949"><p>Are there blue links called <strong>Core isolation details</strong> and <strong>Security processor details</strong> in your Device Security tab? If yes, click them and you’ll be taken to another settings page. Sometimes you’ll find LSA protection, Secure Boot, and other miscellaneous Device Security settings hiding inside the either of those blue links.</p><p></p><p>Another option is to X out of Windows Security and re-open from system tray icon.</p><p></p><p>This issue has affected me too, but not with LSA. For mine, Secure Boot would behind one of those blue links. Or the Security Processor would disappear and settings would report I had no TPM chip, even though I clearly do (enabled fTPM myself in BIOS) or W11 wouldn’t have installed. Doing what I outlined above usually helped. Try checking the details (blue links) option first, before the X-ing out option.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="a090, post: 1033991, member: 99949"] Are there blue links called [B]Core isolation details[/B] and [B]Security processor details[/B] in your Device Security tab? If yes, click them and you’ll be taken to another settings page. Sometimes you’ll find LSA protection, Secure Boot, and other miscellaneous Device Security settings hiding inside the either of those blue links. Another option is to X out of Windows Security and re-open from system tray icon. This issue has affected me too, but not with LSA. For mine, Secure Boot would behind one of those blue links. Or the Security Processor would disappear and settings would report I had no TPM chip, even though I clearly do (enabled fTPM myself in BIOS) or W11 wouldn’t have installed. Doing what I outlined above usually helped. Try checking the details (blue links) option first, before the X-ing out option. [/QUOTE]
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