Phones are computers.
If you’re talking about desktop PCs, we don’t put those in our pockets and carry them literally everywhere and drop them and lose them in random places.
Submitted 1 year ago by WtfEvenIsExistence@reddthat.com to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world
Phones are computers.
If you’re talking about desktop PCs, we don’t put those in our pockets and carry them literally everywhere and drop them and lose them in random places.
They do.
Windows now enables bitlocker by default when you use a Microsoft account, and it saves the keys to onedrive.
Mainstream Linux distros don’t do it by default but it’s an option on install, as Linux usually goes.
MacOS is macOS, I’d be surprised if they didn’t encrypt it before everyone else.
Because Microsoft locked these features to Pro and Enterprise tiers of Windows for profitability reasons.
Very good question.
All the business laptops that I had during the last 15 years or so had encryption enabled (these devices were provided to me by employers).
For my private PC, I simply would not trust Microsoft. Windows itself has become spyware. My private PC isn’t mobile, so the risk is low.
But if I’d buy a laptop for my private use, I would probably use encryption.
if you don’t trust microsoft, why would you use windows at all?
For my private PC, I simply would not trust Microsoft.
Look for something like Win 10 LTSC. It’s entirely stripped down, and usually not readily available to consumers. The updates are only security and stability, no feature.
Alternately, you can try using Linux, but my experiments with Tails are that it’s a challenge and that there’s no documentation to speak of.
Alternately, you can try using Linux, but my experiments with Tails are that it’s a challenge and that there’s no documentation to speak of.
Well, Tails isn’t exactly a “daily driver” Linux distro so documentation will be lacking compared to the alternatives. Something along the lines of Pop OS, Mint, or Ubuntu would be better for most people.
encryption not fun when you lose the key.
Newer versions of OS’es have that option, but I guess most computers are pretty stationary, while most phones leave the house very regularly.
skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl 1 year ago
Rooki@lemmy.world 1 year ago
The encryption can be used for bad things too. Windows 11 itself has so many things just straight up bad. Spyware, Telemetry and instability of some “older” apps aka apps from windows 10.