- REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT INSTALL
- REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT SOFTWARE
- REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT PASSWORD
The download link opens the Norton Setup page in your browser.
REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT INSTALL
On the device where you want to install Norton, find and open the email that you received from "The Norton Team", and tap Download Now. Īn email is sent to the email address with instructions to install the Norton product. Type an email address you can access on your device, and click the send icon. In the Norton Setup window, move your mouse over Download Norton, and then click Send a Download Link. If you do not have a Norton account, click Create account, and complete the sign-up process.
REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT PASSWORD
Type in your email address and password for Norton, and click Sign In. I also take more care to encrypt / protect the data on my devices just in case I need to do a complete wipe.If you are not signed in to Norton already, you are prompted to sign in.
REMOVE NORTON ANTI THEFT SOFTWARE
Call it "stupid criminals" or just dumb luck on my part, but I still put log-me-in, lookout, or some other remote control/tracking software on every device I own.
Mom and teenager both spent part of their Christmas break in lockup. With in 24 hours, the local detectives recovered almost everything they swiped from us and a bunch of other stuff that they had swiped from other people. I wiped some of the data the I knew I had copies of and hoped my windows password was enough of a deterrent to protect the rest. When I connected to it, the kids Mom had her F acebook account and Yahoo email open. My laptop was online, but was "inactive". 12 hours after the event, I fired up my log-me-in account. In addition to my password-protected account, I also one account on my laptop with no password so my family could use it. Encrypting hard drives works well too, although add enough layers of security and you will have to begin balancing your security with performance penalties from too many hoops to jump through to get the job done.Ī couple of years ago a kid broke into our home and swiped my laptop, my son's school laptop, an x-box and several games. However as others mentioned, there's little hope the police are going to go too very far out of the way to track down a stolen laptop. As others have said, back up your valuables, because you can never assume you will get anything back, and tracking is nice *if* you have a particular affinity to your machine. I recommend using something like lojack and/or a hardware-level security solution such as Intel anti-theft (soon to be Mcafee since Intel bought them) purely for the encrypt and remote-nuke functions. Locking the BIOS is simple enough unless a would-be hacker/thief can manage to simply flash the BIOS via removing and replacing the battery, "jumping" the bios, or replacing the bios chip (granted, much more difficult than options 1 or 2) so while helpful it isn't generally a great complete fix either. It's ok, but I wouldn't spend good money on it.
Handy features sure, but there are better options out there for the money than Norton Anti-theft. NAT is useless with the computer off, and can be circumvented if a thief can gain access to an admin account.
Norton Anti-Theft is a software solution that to my knowledge isn't as advanced as say L4L.