Hello Jamf Nation!
I work for an asset recovery company that regularly buys large lots of Apple equipment from schools, and as a result we are well versed in helping schools remove their devices from MDM and releasing them from ASM/ABM.
Lately we've been encountering issues from more than one school (system) where Macs are fully erased, but are locked with EFI firmware passwords and the IT departments 100% insist that they don't know what the password is. We know that EFI passwords can be deployed and removed via MDM, so we sent them links to Jamf documentation for managing EFI passwords in hopes of refreshing their memory and they still insist they know nothing. We asked them to check with any employees or volunteers who may have helped deploy these Macs and still nothing.
If this were one school system, we'd chalk it up to an unfortunate mistake, but we've received batches of Macs from different parts of the country with this exact same issue— No one in their technology departments knows what the passwords are and seem surprised to learn that the equipment is locked.
My question is: Has there been a recent change to Jamf or Mac management that could enable a firmware password on a fleet either by default, or otherwise without the admin knowing? Everything I've seen and read seems to indicate that an admin would have to either use built-in functionality to enable EFI passwords or deploy a script or package that configures it.