This Drive Locked By Ata Password -

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).

| 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" | 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. If you’re seeing this message on a laptop

sudo hdparm -I /dev/sdX Look for: