Macworld UK

Help Desk

How to cope with a FileVault recovery key disappearing while you write it down

FileVault is an extraordinary bit of macOS technology. Introduced years ago, it encrypts the entire contents of your start-up volume so that when the data is at rest – when your Mac is powered down – the drive is effectively full of garbage nonsense to anyone who doesn’t possess either the password to an account authorized to log in via FileVault or the special recovery key set when you turn FileVault on.

When you use the Security & Privacy preference pane’s FileVault tab to enable this encryption, macOS prompts you with two choices:

• Allow my iCloud account to unlock my disk

• Create a recovery key and do not use my iCloud account

In both cases, a recovery key is set. However, if you use iCloud to store your key, you never see it, and Apple manages the recovery process. All you need is your iCloud password

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Macworld UK

Macworld UK10 min read
Review: 15-inch M3 MacBook Air
Over the years, we’ve touted the MacBook Air as the laptop for just about anyone – it’s an ideal combination of performance, features, and price. It became even more compelling when Apple redesigned it and upgraded to the M2 chip in 2022 and released
Macworld UK4 min read
5 Wild PC Hardware Ideas That Would Be Even Better On The Mac
Macworld columnist Jason Snell has written about how Apple should take more risks with its products – and I wholeheartedly agree, especially when it comes to the Mac. Makers of Windows PCs often implement odd features to stand out in a crowded market
Macworld UK1 min read
Apple Ekes Out A Small Year-over-year Revenue Gain On Eve Of Vision Pro Launch
After a somewhat disappointing string of quarterly releases, Apple reported a 2 percent year-over-year revenue gain in the first fiscal quarter of 2024 on the back of $119.6 billion in revenue. And that’s with one fewer week than last year’s quarter

Related Books & Audiobooks