How do you turn on encryption on a Time Machine drive?
I'm not seeing any way to do this in Time Machine preferences or in the Finder. Is there a trick to this?
Thanks very much.
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I'm not seeing any way to do this in Time Machine preferences or in the Finder. Is there a trick to this?
Thanks very much.
System Preferences>Time Machine>Select Disk and tick the bottom left hand corner box.
NOTE: that you may have to unselect the disk and then reselect it.
I must do that myself at some point. Never bothered, and no idea why
System Preferences>Time Machine>Select Disk and tick the bottom left hand corner box.
NOTE: that you may have to unselect the disk and then reselect it.
I must do that myself at some point. Never bothered, and no idea why
I recently did it on a new SSD external but according to the following you can also do it later without losing data as long as it is locally connected: https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/keep-your-time-machine-backup-disk-secure-mh21241/mac
See the following from the previous link:
When you switch locally connected disks (such as an external disk) to encrypted backups, your data is preserved and encrypted.
If you want to change from unencrypted to encrypted backups, you must remove your backup disk and then set it up again. Follow these steps:
The Time Machine drive already has backups on it. This is what I see in System Prefs
If I select the backup disk the encrypt option below it is grayed out. If I select the same drive below, encryption is available. It's perfectly unclear what that means, and why there's a distinction. I don't see how the software could be more poorly designed for this functionality. Does it mean that if I check the lower drive everything on the drive will be lost as the drive is encrypted? Does it mean everything that I backup from now on will be encrypted, and everything previously is unencrypted? Does it mean it will encrypt the drive and its contents and treat it as a new drive though it looks and acts exactly the same and has the same name? What's the point? If I can encrypt the drive, why not let me check the assigned Time Machine drive at the top?
Certainly let the current backup end. Mine is greyed out too, and I think it is because encryption can only be selected at the time of selecting the disk (0.9 probability). I do know it can be applied retrospectively. I'm not sure what then time overhead is of switching it on. I think there is no real overhead once it is deployed
I've struggled to understand why I need to do it. I backup to a NAS and I have no problem in smashing faulty NAS drive. My MBP has encrypted SSD
[edit] No, I will not. See italics. "The best way to keep your backups secure is to encrypt your backup disk. When you switch a Time Capsule or network backup disk from unencrypted to encrypted, your existing backups are erased and new encrypted backup sets are created. When you switch locally connected disks (such as an external disk) to encrypted backups, your data is preserved and encrypted."
Re: I've struggled to understand why I need to do it. I backup to a NAS
Not sure if this is what you meant, but I backup to a USB connected SSD and I use FileVault on it only to protect the data in the event of a theft of the SSD.
I suppose it depends on whether the backup drive ever leaves one's direct control, or whether there is a risk of that.
With FileVault switched on and adding encrypted TM backup as to it as well one might say it was belt and braces, though👀
If you mean FileVault turned on in your internal main drive, note that when that is backed up (whether via Time Machine, 3rd party apps such as Carbon Copy Cloner, or online backup services), the backup is not protected.
Because TM has always been peculiar in that regard. I'm sorry, there is no better answer that I know of.
Do note the caveat if your TM drive is a NAS or a Time Capsule that your backup will be erased and will start all over again
What does that do? Erase the content and create new backups? Leave the existing content unencrypted and encrypt future backups? Or does it encrypt the drive, the existing content, and continue on from there? Hopefully the last. Not sure why the step of deselecting and reselecting the drive is necessary, but I guess that’s the way it is.
Got it. Thanks very much. It's grayed out at the moment, but I think that's because the drive is backing up.
It encrypts the entire drive (present and future contents) without erasing your data.
How do you turn on encryption on a Time Machine drive?