15 Statement of Volatility
The purpose of this document is to provide general information regarding non-volatile memory in
industry-standards based HP Business Notebook PC systems and provide general instructions for
restoring nonvolatile memory that can contain personal data after the system has been powered off
and the hard drive has been removed.
HP Business Notebook PC products that use Intel®-based or AMD®-based system boards contain
volatile DDR memory. The amount of nonvolatile memory present in the system depends upon the
system configuration. Intel-based and AMD-based system boards contain nonvolatile memory
subcomponents as originally shipped from HP assuming that no subsequent modifications have been
made to the system and assuming that no applications, features, or functionality have been added to
or installed on the system.
Following system shutdown and removal of all power sources from an HP Business Notebook PC
system, personal data can remain on volatile system memory (DIMMs) for a finite period of time and
will also remain in nonvolatile memory. The steps below will remove personal data from the notebook
PC, including the nonvolatile memory found in Intel-based and AMD-based system boards. Some of
these steps are disclosed in the Maintenance & Service Guides available for HP PC products
available on the product support pages at
1.
Follow steps (a) through (I) below to restore the nonvolatile memory that can contain personal
data. Restoring or reprogramming nonvolatile memory that does not store personal data is
neither necessary nor recommended.
a.
Enter BIOS (F10) Setup by powering on the system and pressing
F10
when prompted near
the bottom of the display, or press the
ESC
key to display the start up menu, then press
F10
. If the system has a BIOS administrator password, enter the password at the prompt.
b.
Select the File menu, then Restore Defaults.
c.
Select the System Configuration menu, then Restore Security Defaults.
d.
If an asset or ownership tag is set, select the Security menu and scroll down to the Utilities
menu. Select System IDs, and then select the tag that has been set. Press the spacebar
once to clear the tag, then press
Enter
to return to the prior menu.
e.
If a DriveLock password is set, select the Security menu, select Hard Drive Tools, scroll
down to DriveLock, then select DriveLock password. Select the desired hard drive. Click
Disable protection, enter the existing master DriveLock password, then press
Enter
to
confirm and return to the prior menu. Repeat this procedure if more than one hard drive has
a DriveLock password.
f.
If an Automatic DriveLock password is set, select the Security menu, select Hard Drive
Tools, scroll down to Automatic DriveLock, then select the desired hard drive and disable
protection. Repeat this procedure if more than one hard drive has an Automatic DriveLock
password.
g.
Select the File menu, then Reset BIOS Security to factory default. Click yes at the warning
message.
h.
Select the File menu, then Save Changes and Exit.
120 Chapter 15 Statement of Volatility
Summary of Contents for ProBook 470 G1
Page 1: ...HP ProBook 470 G1 Notebook PC Maintenance and Service Guide ...
Page 4: ...iv Important Notice about Customer Self Repair Parts ...
Page 6: ...vi Safety warning notice ...
Page 12: ...xii ...
Page 17: ...Category Description Hard drive Memory module Optical drive WLAN module Keyboard 5 ...