A few years ago, I received a Dell laptop from a friend who didn't need it anymore. I recently learned that the laptop actually belonged to a company where my friend used to work before getting fired. Since the company didn't ask for the laptop back, I just swapped out the original 256 GB NVMe SSD with a new 2TB SSD without doing anything else with the old SSD.
I'm aware that corporate laptops might have tracking software or other monitoring systems, and I'm worried that even though I changed the SSD, the company could still have access to the laptop. For instance, I've heard that some laptops have hardware features that can alert the company when someone opens them up.
My question is whether it's possible for the company to have remote access or to install software without me knowing, especially at a BIOS level. Is there a way for BIOS modifications to persist even after swapping SSDs? I'm not very familiar with how corporate-issued laptops work, so should I continue using it or stop due to privacy concerns? Was swapping the SSD sufficient to ensure my privacy?
2 Answers
If the laptop is still enrolled in a system like Intune, it could reconnect as soon as it goes online. I’d recommend doing a fresh install of Windows before you get the 2TB drive just to see if it’s still hooked up. If it reconnects, you could always install Linux or keep it offline for better safety.
They probably aren’t too concerned about it anymore. If they did, I’m sure they would have taken action by now. Education departments usually aren’t that vigilant. Most likely, they just have the laptop's info recorded, and if you tried to install Windows, it might try to register itself as a corporate one, but if it hasn’t done that yet, they probably just wrote it off.
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