Karlin High
Member
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Missouri, USA
A customer brought in a Dell Vostro 3400 laptop. He got it from a friend who used it at a police department or somewhere, and it was set up with a drive-encryption password which the friend had forgotten. We powered up the laptop; it goes through the BIOS process and then says:
----------------------------------------------------------
Wave Systems Corp
www.wave.com
User name: [...]
Password:
Trusted Drive [HDD S/N], is locally managed and is
protected by a password authentication system. You cannot
access data on this hard drive without a correct password.
----------------------------------------------------------
I immediately thought this was something like TrueCrypt, and said we'd need to erase the hard drive and reinstall Windows. No problem, go ahead, the customer said.
But, now I realize I'm in over my head.
The hard drive is a Seagate Momentus 7200 FDE.2 (ST9250464ASG.) Here's the manual:
http://www.seagate.com/staticfiles/support/disc/manuals/notebook/momentus/7200 FDE.2/100571983a.pdf
Apparently it doesn't allow access to the drive AT ALL without proper authentication. It has secure erase instructions, but apparently requires knowing the password first.
I tried the PartedMagic live Linux CD and Seagate's own SeaTools on the Ultimate Boot CD. Both list the drive capacity as something ridiculously low, like 128MB (yes, the number is megabytes.) I'm thinking, anything I try on the file system level isn't going to wipe it, since most of the drive isn't even appearing. So, I tried using the ATA secure erase command in PartedMagic, as well as the erase drive command in SeaTools. ATA secure erase disappears with no message. SeaTools says its command failed. So, I tried the S.M.A.R.T extended self test, and it completed with no problems.
So, I rebooted the computer, and the same login screen came up again. None of my erasure attempts seems to have fazed it a bit.
On to more research; here's Wave Computing, their Embassy Trust Suite is what I think I have:
http://www.wave.com/support/self-en...cation-fails-unknown-or-incorrect-credentials
Wave says to call Dell. The computer's warranty expired 5 months ago; Dell wants to sell me a warranty upgrade before they'll help me.
At this point, I'm debating whether I'd be better off just replacing the hard drive, even though it seems otherwise OK.
Unless someone knows how you unlock one of these things?
----------------------------------------------------------
Wave Systems Corp
www.wave.com
User name: [...]
Password:
Trusted Drive [HDD S/N], is locally managed and is
protected by a password authentication system. You cannot
access data on this hard drive without a correct password.
----------------------------------------------------------
I immediately thought this was something like TrueCrypt, and said we'd need to erase the hard drive and reinstall Windows. No problem, go ahead, the customer said.
But, now I realize I'm in over my head.
The hard drive is a Seagate Momentus 7200 FDE.2 (ST9250464ASG.) Here's the manual:
http://www.seagate.com/staticfiles/support/disc/manuals/notebook/momentus/7200 FDE.2/100571983a.pdf
Apparently it doesn't allow access to the drive AT ALL without proper authentication. It has secure erase instructions, but apparently requires knowing the password first.
I tried the PartedMagic live Linux CD and Seagate's own SeaTools on the Ultimate Boot CD. Both list the drive capacity as something ridiculously low, like 128MB (yes, the number is megabytes.) I'm thinking, anything I try on the file system level isn't going to wipe it, since most of the drive isn't even appearing. So, I tried using the ATA secure erase command in PartedMagic, as well as the erase drive command in SeaTools. ATA secure erase disappears with no message. SeaTools says its command failed. So, I tried the S.M.A.R.T extended self test, and it completed with no problems.
So, I rebooted the computer, and the same login screen came up again. None of my erasure attempts seems to have fazed it a bit.
On to more research; here's Wave Computing, their Embassy Trust Suite is what I think I have:
http://www.wave.com/support/self-en...cation-fails-unknown-or-incorrect-credentials
Wave says to call Dell. The computer's warranty expired 5 months ago; Dell wants to sell me a warranty upgrade before they'll help me.
At this point, I'm debating whether I'd be better off just replacing the hard drive, even though it seems otherwise OK.
Unless someone knows how you unlock one of these things?