![]() It seems most likely that wherever the remote wipe lives, it's somewhere on the recovery partition. The Find my Mac remote wipe causes a reboot. ![]() Also, it would be very difficult for a running process to wipe its own boot drive. Evidences for this include the fact that "Find my Mac" will not turn on (be greyed out) if there is no Restore partition present. None of the documentation about configuration mentions options to enable these selectively the control is off/on.Īs far as disabling remote wipe, there seems to be a strong indication that the remote wipe involves rebooting to the Restore partition. This is the closest I have found to a direct statement that it's one package: if it's set up, you can locate, display a message, play a sound, lock, or erase. In this Knowledge Base article, Apple write "With Find My iPhone set up on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch or Mac, you can locate, display a message, play a sound, remotely lock, or remotely wipe (erase) your device using the Find My iPhone app from another device (such as a friend's iPhone or iPad)."
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