I doubt that they would check your laptop that thoroughly. I tried looking online and couldn't find any reported cases of such incidents. Of course that's not conclusive evidence.
I would expect them to ask you to turn on the laptop to make sure that it's functioning and it hasn't been tampered with. So to be safe, make sure that you're using one of the BIOS OEM cracks that are pretty hard to detect (if you need more help with this send me a message). Also make sure you're Desktop and common Libraries don't contain files that are obviously pirated. I would suggest that you just encrypt all your pirated files into an archive (you can use 7zip or any similar application) and hide it in some obscure directory. In addition, just uninstall the games and Office (you can store the setup files for those in that same encrypted archive).
I doubt that they would ask you to decrypt the archive (that's if they even find it) and you can just say you forgot the password or don't know what the file is :P. You can even split the archive into much smaller files and rename them to look like temp Windows files if you want to be extra cautious.
Worst case is that they would confiscate your hardware but I don't think they will deny you entry over such a small issue. Canada also has pretty lax piracy laws when compared to other countries like the US.
I would expect them to ask you to turn on the laptop to make sure that it's functioning and it hasn't been tampered with. So to be safe, make sure that you're using one of the BIOS OEM cracks that are pretty hard to detect (if you need more help with this send me a message). Also make sure you're Desktop and common Libraries don't contain files that are obviously pirated. I would suggest that you just encrypt all your pirated files into an archive (you can use 7zip or any similar application) and hide it in some obscure directory. In addition, just uninstall the games and Office (you can store the setup files for those in that same encrypted archive).
I doubt that they would ask you to decrypt the archive (that's if they even find it) and you can just say you forgot the password or don't know what the file is :P. You can even split the archive into much smaller files and rename them to look like temp Windows files if you want to be extra cautious.
Worst case is that they would confiscate your hardware but I don't think they will deny you entry over such a small issue. Canada also has pretty lax piracy laws when compared to other countries like the US.