Press the Command and R keys at the same time when the grey screen appears and hold them until you see the Apple logo. A small loading bar will appear under the logo. Sit tight as your system boots into Recovery Mode. Click the Utilities tab in the top menu bar, select Terminal, type resetpassword and press Enter.
Christian Perez
You have to turn the computer off then do this as it's turning on again
Easton Bell
I googled that. This seems to reset her password completely which will make it obvious that I tried to access it...
Is there some way in which she won't notice anything?
John Ross
Try root as a password several times. maybe she hasn't installed the security updates yet.
Blake Mitchell
create a new password and just pretend you didnt touch it so she has to take it to apple store and restore it from her apple id
LOl. worth it
Leo Cooper
AFAIK to exploit this security issue the username must be set to root and password should be empty
Carter Torres
Yeah, you're right. Mixed that up.
Julian Rodriguez
Way to risky man. After leaving her laptop with me, the nerd in the class, her password magically changed? Even if she can't prove anything I am gonna look very bad here. Can't do that sorry
John Collins
The security patch installs itself automatically.
Boot to recovery, use disk utilities to clone her hdd/ssd to your flash drive if it fits.
Jacob Rogers
idea.jpg
So why dont you do this, then you leave the room, OP? Think outside the box.
Henry Gonzalez
What about dropping the laptop anonymously to some random cunt in your school after doing the following?
Camden Perez
Text her and ask if you can use it yours is messed up and you need to look something up about something for a class etc.
Chase Morales
This, and then copy and post nudes
Henry Rivera
No it doesn't. The bug was a very specific bug and the patch won't even show up as available to download before you reboot.
The bug exists due to changing from HPF+J (or whatever the acronym is) to APFS. Back when El Capitan released they put SIP in which disabled root and set the password to *. The block chain conversion function for password hash doesn't know how to handle * and rather than crash it converts it into an empty string.
That bug was triggered via >New install of high Sierra >No reboot >Go to accounts >Click lock >Unlock it once >Relock >click lock but this time enter root as the username >Leave password blank and the box will shake (this is the conversion) >Leave root as user and blank password again
Gabriel Allen
I am in disk utility. I can see her drive as "Encrypted logical Partition".
I don't see any clone or mount options
Luis Williams
Fuck I don't think this is possible besides changing the account password.
Damn it apple why you gotta make it so hard to get nudes
Luis Collins
Bump for interest
Alexander Parker
JSE will be new standart in web monetization. Multi billion market. So there's a good chance it will be BIG. You don't need high-end GPU or CPU, mining is equal for everyone. JSEcoin will be listed on exchange in 2018. So we still got some time to mine coins with low competition before general audience turns in.
If you want to register with my referall, i will get 3.5 and you will get something too coins from this - jsecoin com/o/?a=44885
Jason Rogers
Would a brute force work?
James Adams
following this thread
Josiah Taylor
Use a program called konboot
Luke Lopez
Bump
Luis Lewis
boot in single user mode, should give you root access, then grab the files trough commandline.
Anthony Hughes
Well maybe if you weren't such an incompetent normie fuck you could figure it out on your own. glhf