![]() But, someone will have to verify that for me. It should still decrypt the drive, even if it isn't admin. If your Mac is encrypted, then you will need the decryption password which is commonly your admin password for the one account you no longer have admin capability. Important point to follow there is you need to use Disk Utility to mount the drives. This doesn't seem possible anymore and must be done from Terminal in Recovery. Other solutions still suggest booting into Single-User Mode and remove the file from System volume.Īpple has removed all the articles on Single-User mode, so suffice it to say Single-User mode allowed you to boot up as root into a Terminal-like console. You must boot up into Recovery and use Terminal. I have tested this on Catalina, Big Sur, and Monterey. However, those tutorials don't work under Catalina or later. AppleSetupDone so that the Mac thinks it is new and runs the Setup Assistant to create a new Admin user if you have lost that capability. There are several tutorials on how to delete.
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