iBoysoft BitLocker Recovery requires the password or 48-digit recovery key to read-only access your BitLocker drive. That means no one can use our BitLocker data recovery program to access your data but you.
BitLocker is a powerful encryption solution developed by Microsoft that encrypts your drive, so it is protected if your device is ever lost or stolen. But if your drive has been corrupted or cannot be accessed with your password, your files could be lost forever. We've developed a safe and professional BitLocker recovery software that can help you recover files lost from BitLocker encrypted drive safely and quickly. We are your best shot at BitLocker recovery.
BitLocker is designed to work seamlessly in the background of your computer, but BitLocker drive encryption can get stuck or failed for some reason. iBoysoft BitLocker Recovery tool can get your files back quickly and easily.
Files deleted from BitLocker encrypted drive? iBoysoft BitLocker Recovery is your most advisable deleted file recovery software to undelete files from hard drive, USB drive, SD card, and other storage device.
iBoysoft Data Recovery WinPE bootable media can save your files easily after Windows 10 won't boot, Surface Pro won't turn on, etc., but 48-digit BitLocker recovery key is the only way to decrypt the data from BitLocker-encrypted OS drive due to TPM (trusted platform module).
This BitLocker data recovery tool supports a long list of disk-based storage media. You can recover your deleted or lost files from a computer's internal hard drive, external hard drive, USB drive, SD card, and so on.
The app can let you recover files lost due to accidental deletion, formatting, or even virus infection. You can even use it to get files from inaccessible partitions. However, while using the app is simple, the scenarios in which it can work can be a bit complicated. Moreso, it is so very dependent on the recovery key that you cannot do anything about your lost files without it. If you lost that, too, you might as well kiss all your important data goodbye.
I downloaded it, made the USB bootable and checked it was able to unlock bitlocker partition and browse. Obviously unable to recover files in Trial. Thought the tool could come in handy when I need to help family or friends. So went to buy and saw it's $169 dollars hahaha.. I actually never closed a browser faster in my life. I genuinely expected this to be a $10-20 dollar tool considering there are alternatives that do the same thing for free. More reviews >>
Solution : ADManager plus allows to retrieve bitlocker recovery report which gives the volume GUID, recovery GUID, recovery password and also the KeyPackage (in a downloadable format), of all the BitLocker protected/encrypted drives of your computers.
I have a backup drive that is used mostly for that purpose: to backup data from my computer. I did move data onto it temporarily at some point, but I believe and I hope I've moved it back off in the meantime. It's protected by bitlocker. When I was away and someone was house-sitting, they connected their Android tablet to a port replicator that the backup drive was connected to, and inadvertedly told Android to "fix" the drive (because Android doesn't recognize NTFS formatted drives, much less those protected by bitlocker), which formatted it as exFAT. It couldn't have been a deep format, because she didn't have it connected for long. Meaning: it should be possible to recover the data, right?
What other options do I have? (I am also slightly worried about the fact that I currently am not backing up my computer until I get this resolved, because I don't want to overwrite anything that could still be recovered.)
The recovery key (as well as the stored auto-unlock key) does not decrypt your disk directly; it only decrypts the real encryption key that's stored in the BitLocker header, which is at the very beginning of the partition.
So if that part of the disk was overwritten (such as by writing a new FAT filesystem on top of it), the rest of the BitLocker volume becomes unrecoverable. Yes, the rest of your data is technically still there on the disk, but you no longer have the key to decrypt it.
The intention of the Bitlocker designers was to make it asresilient as possible to disk problems. Therefore thedisk headers are duplicated on the disk.Some products claim being able to recover such disks,but they are very costly.I found only one product that is free as described below.Whether the disk can be recovered or not depends on theamount of destruction that was done.
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