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翻訳の問題を報告
This warning it always shows by default irrelevant of if you have enabled Bitlocker or not.
If you have Bitlocker enabled make sure you have your recovery key at hand, Windows is going to ask for it since it will not be able to unlock the disk on its own.
I am indeed running Windows 11 Home edition :) I don't have encryption key .. I don't even know what it is LOL.
So does it means that I don't need to do anything?
Are there any other settings maybe in Home edition that use the TPM is some way?
Good luck with the upgrade.
Home editions can still have encryption if it's by an OEM, but it's not exactly Bitlocker.
If you want your data to be safe and encrypted on Windows and I do recommend to get the Professional edition. You can get retail keys on a good deal from certain distributors.
Hard drive encryption is a security feature. It scrambles your data in such a way that can only be unscrambled if you have the password. You would know if you have drive encryption enabled because you would have to enter a password before the computer even reaches the user login screen, at the start of the boot up process.
The reason for it is if somebody gets access to your computer, they can't easily just spy on your stuff by pulling out the hard drive and putting it in an external enclosure. That is a pretty easy way to bypass login restrictions, because they would be logging in on their computer with their user account rather than yours, and yours would just be treated as a data drive.