Apple Intelligence now features Image Playground, Genmoji, Writing Tools enhancements, seamless support for ChatGPT, and visual intelligence.

Apple Intelligence has also begun language expansion with localized English support for Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, and the U.K. Learn more >

You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Filevault: A recovery key has been set by your company, school, or institution

Just upgraded my completely personal (nothing to do with work) Mac that was bought brand new from Apple and this message appeared when I enabled Filevault. No recovery key was given to me; it just started encrypting.


How can this be given that it is a personal Mac?


I guess I'll just hope that my password is good enough but very curious why this message appeared.


Thanks!


"A recovery key has been set by your company, school, or institution"

OS 10.13.3

MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2015)

macOS High Sierra (10.13), null

Posted on Feb 19, 2018 8:01 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Mar 23, 2018 10:25 PM

If you have a Developer account you can use Apple's bug reporting tool. I believe anyone can have a Developer account, and I'm not even sure if you need one to report a bug. Otherwise use Feedback - macOS - Apple.


For what it's worth, this is what it ought to look like:


User uploaded file



Perhaps it's a bug, perhaps not, but what you're seeing is misleading at best.

Similar questions

7 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 23, 2018 10:25 PM in response to CharPatton

If you have a Developer account you can use Apple's bug reporting tool. I believe anyone can have a Developer account, and I'm not even sure if you need one to report a bug. Otherwise use Feedback - macOS - Apple.


For what it's worth, this is what it ought to look like:


User uploaded file



Perhaps it's a bug, perhaps not, but what you're seeing is misleading at best.

Feb 24, 2018 2:22 PM in response to John Galt

Thanks for taking the time to reply!


The few times I've called Apple Support it's been to no avail; really cheerful English-major folks totally reading off of a script but no in-depth knowledge so after wasting a few hours each time the questions were unanswered. I've had much better luck with the gurus who answer on this forum over the years.


I don't have anything worth stealing on the computer, but given all the talk about security and cybercrime in the media I hope this doesn't mean that Apple has been hacked by someone and that disk encryption no longer works.


Would be fascinated to learn from anyone why this might be occurring, and how to encrypt an Apple hard drive using Filevault without some unknown outsider also presumably having an access key...


Best.

Feb 26, 2018 7:26 PM in response to John Galt

That's what is so weird- ordered from the Apple Store (internet) and delivered by post. So, theoretically at least, not touched by anyone prior to us receiving it. Hope it's just a bug, and not that someone super smart has hacked it. Is there any way to report to Apple without hanging on phone tree h&&& forever and wasting tons of time???

Filevault: A recovery key has been set by your company, school, or institution

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.