This Drive Locked By Ata Password (TRUSTED • HOW-TO)

| Feature | | Master Password | |--------|------------------|----------------------| | Set by | User or BIOS | Manufacturer / IT / User | | Purpose | Normal daily lock | Recovery override | | Can disable drive? | Yes (if forgotten, drive is essentially bricked without master) | No, but can unlock if user password lost | | Security erase | Needs user password to erase normally; master can trigger "Security Erase Unit" |

sudo hdparm -I /dev/sdX Look for:

If you’re seeing this message on a laptop you own, check your BIOS manual immediately — the password may be stored there or linked to a TPM chip. If it’s a second-hand drive, contact the previous owner or consider it a brick unless you use PSID revert (for SSDs). this drive locked by ata password

When you see the message "This drive locked by ATA password" (or similar variations like "ATA Security Lock," "HDD/SSD Locked," or "Enter ATA Password"), it means the storage drive (HDD, SSD, or even an NVMe drive in ATA mode) has a security feature enabled at the firmware level. This is not your Windows login password or BitLocker encryption — it's a password stored directly on the drive's controller chip. When you see the message "This drive locked