Comment by iscoelho
7 hours ago
If the device doesn't have BitLocker, this exploit is pointless because you can already boot any OS USB and immediately have full access to the unencrypted disk.
This exploit is only ever relevant with BitLocker enabled (as a method to "bypass" BitLocker's security premise [categorically classifying this as, dare I say, a "BitLocker bypass"]).
To avoid typing 1)2)3)4) a bunch of more times, I'll just say 2/3/4) all still fit the definition of downplaying the situation.
> If the device doesn't have BitLocker, this exploit is pointless because you can already boot any OS USB
For this hypothetical, assume the owner took basic precautions to lock booting to the hard drive and password protect the BIOS.
But I'm not 100% familiar with how recovery mode normally works, so maybe it doesn't matter.
> To avoid typing 1)2)3)4) a bunch of more times, I'll just say 2/3/4) all still fit the definition of downplaying the situation.
I think that level of pushback against the claims is a valid (and small) amount of "downplaying". I haven't seen anyone claiming this isn't a serious issue.
If the device does not have BitLocker, WinRE already by default provides full Administrator access to the unencrypted disk via Command Prompt.
> I think that level of pushback against the claims is a valid (and small) amount of "downplaying". I haven't seen anyone claiming this isn't a serious issue.
If you look in the other threads about this, it's much more obvious. Look for brand new users. There's comparatively few in this thread, but the pattern is there: if the user's name is green, they're downplaying this.