Quote:
“Although data is the most valuable part of a computer to most companies, some people really want the machine back,” Eades said in explaining why the back-trace feature might be useful. “Imagine if you had 100 machines stolen on the same night. That's a significant investment.” Tracing the thief would also come in handy, he said, if a company were suffering from repeated hardware theft, for example, perhaps by a disgruntled insider.
Eades said that a simple re-flash of the BIOS -- a chore often done by IT staffs and end-users to update the software in the BIOS chip -- would not thwart TheftGuard.
“You would have to be severely technical, really know your way around BIOS to remove [TheftGuard]. Most people who would know how to do this work for Phoenix,” he said, adding that the part of the BIOS where TheftGuard resides is not updatable via a flash upgrade.
if your cousin didn't steal the computer, and he just bought it from someone... it sounds like he might have gotten stolen goods palmed off to him, or it's been incorrectly listed as stolen? *shrug* :huh: