Renice X5A series 2.5" SATA3 SSD supports AES 256bit encryption, SED, TCG OPAL2.0




To protect your data security, there are many ways to do with it, hardware and software based encryption methods to realize it.

As know BIOS can set password, or PC motherboard can set password (if supports PCM), moreover, the SSD drive can set password.

Take Renice X5A series 2.5" SATA3 SSD for example, because Renice X5A SSD supports AES encryption, SED, TCG OPAL2.0, then you can set password through "Rescue System", the password is stored in the SSD drive, no one can read your data even it was stolen, it need your password to access to the SSD.

Then you might want to know that why need to ask for your password seems it stores in the SSD? Because the password is encrypting into other numbers/words, e.g. you set "123456" as password, but it might store as "^%$##@*" through hash.

Someone might ask is it safe if SSD drive only supports AES encryption? 

The answer is NO, let's say that, if the SSD only supports  AES encryption but don't support TCG OPAL2.0, your enemy still can read your data if they stole your drive, because AES encryption is a self-encrypting and self-decrypting encryption algorithms, only when the FW or NAND flash is destroyed, the data then will be read as unreadable code.


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