this post was submitted on 26 Apr 2025
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Today i took my first steps into the world of Linux by creating a bookable Mint Cinamon USB stick to fuck around on without wiping or portioning my laptop drive.

I realised windows has the biggest vulnerability for the average user.

While booting off of the usb I could access all the data on my laptop without having to input a password.

After some research it appears drives need to be encrypted to prevent this, so how is this not the default case in Windows?

I'm sure there are people aware but for the laymen this is such a massive vulnerability.

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[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I still remember years ago one time windows fucked itself and god knows why I couldn't fix it even with USB recovery or stuff like that (long time ago, I don't remember).

Since I couldn't boot into recovery mode the easiest way to backup my stuff to a connected external drive was "open notepad from the command line -> use the GUI send to.. command to send the files to the external drive -> wait and profit" lol.