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Second Hand Hard Discs Reveal Secrets

An anonymous reader writes "BBC News has a story about MIT grads buying old hard discs from eBay and elsewhere, and finding credit card numbers, ATM transactions, porn and emails all accessible on them. Comments? What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"

445 comments

  1. Another Duplicate.... by Cubeman · · Score: 5, Informative

    This was posted before here.

    1. Re:Another Duplicate.... by swordboy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually,

      I believe the original story was in the cache files on the hard drives in question.

      BaDoom!

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    2. Re:Another Duplicate.... by JPelorat · · Score: 0, Funny

      There does seem to be rather a lot of tripe posted here.

      --
      Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
    3. Re:Another Duplicate.... by Library+Spoff · · Score: 1

      yeah the Microsoft/Record Label DRM story on the same technology page at BBC news was a better story I thought... *mutter mutter*

      Karma... all spent up.

      --
      Acid House saves Souls
    4. Re:Another Duplicate.... by Library+Spoff · · Score: 0

      ...mind you if i'd searched properly i'd of found my submission was a dupe too... *double mutter mutter and red face*

      --
      Acid House saves Souls
    5. Re:Another Duplicate.... by WetCat · · Score: 1

      Even this dup could be tolerable if it was posted yesterday,
      when we have no news for some hours and were almost forced to discuss the stupid topic on XM and FM radio...
      Hard drives are more interesting.
      I have 2 SCSI Barracuda hard drives which hold some my internal information. The computer in which those drives were installed is already dead. Could you tell me any way to erase data without using SCSI controller?
      I am not planning to physically damage the drives.
      Is it possible?

    6. Re:Another Duplicate.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you would *have* found, not would *of* found.

      What you think is 'of' is really just the way the contraction sounds (would have -> would've)

      "I'd've" logged in, but there it is. (same number of keys, so no bitching about saving time)

      (and for all of you who get indignant at having your spelling and grammar corrected... did you laugh at all the Dan Quayle 'potatoe' jokes? Thought so. If it matters for one, it matters for all. But I'm guessing your hypocritical little minds won't manage to see that point.)

    7. Re:Another Duplicate.... by Ledskof · · Score: 1

      You could pass it through the field of a powerful magnet. I'm a physics tard, so I don't know if you could pass it through a magnet strong enough to damage any of the electronics in it or anything.

      --
      This is my sig. The post is over.
    8. Re:Another Duplicate.... by mmol_6453 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't recommend it. A field that strong might leave a strong magnetic image on the metal parts of the drive. That image could interfere with the read-write heads of the drive.

      Floppy disks aren't so bad, since A) they're cheap and B) they're mostly plastic.

      Never took apart a Zip disk, though. Dunno what'd happen.

      --
      What's this Submit thingy do?
    9. Re:Another Duplicate.... by Detritus · · Score: 1
      You are going to find that it is almost impossible to find a magnet strong enough to erase the disk. At work, we have a number of super heavy-duty NSA approved degaussers. They can erase the credit cards in your wallet and jam cardiac pacemakers, just by being in the same room as the degausser, but they can't erase modern hard disks and newer tape formulations. The coercivity on modern media is just too high. The media must be overwritten by the device that created it or it must be physically destroyed.

      Even if you found a magnet that was strong enough to erase the data, it would also destroy the servo information on the disk platters. That would render the drive useless, since it must have the servo information to position the head on the disk. The disk drive factory is the only place that has the equipment that can write servo information on the disk platters.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    10. Re:Another Duplicate.... by lunatik17 · · Score: 1

      Sure, go download a program called Wipe and use it on the entire device. According to the DOD 5220.22-M specification, overwriting a file 5 to 7 times with random data is sufficient to prevent recovery. Wipe does it 34 times by default. When you use this program on a file or filesystem, it is gone. Period.

      --

      Here's my DeCSS mirror, where's yours?

    11. Re:Another Duplicate.... by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      I believe the original story was in the cache files on the hard drives in question.

      On a more serious note. I think it's probably the fact that the original artical had a stupid title.

      Data-mining has nothing to do with finding old data on people's hard drives (the original title had something to that effect). I'm not exactly sure what it means. But I'm pretty sure it has to do with statistics and finding trends and other info from a database of collected (and seemingly meaning less) data. Seems to be a popular marketing tool.

      You can see how someone might get confused though. But you can't blame Taco for going by the title.

    12. Re:Another Duplicate.... by WetCat · · Score: 1

      you didn't understood my problem. I cannot connect those drives to the computer - I now have no SCSI interface on any of the computers I have access to.
      The only thing I can do is connect this drive to power and experiment with its switches or scsi pins.

    13. Re:Another Duplicate.... by karlandtanya · · Score: 1
      Why is no SCSI card a problem?

      Do you plan to sell the drives on ebay?

      Search completed items on ebay for SCSI ADAPTER produces 11 pages of adapters and cables for under $10.00!!

      If the drives are not worth $10.00+shipping, bust 'em open and stick the platters in the microwave.

      Or use 'em for target practice.

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    14. Re:Another Duplicate.... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      You can see how someone might get confused though. But you can't blame Taco for going by the title.

      Of course you shouldn't go by title. I just plugged "MIT" into Slashdot's search box and found the dupe immediately. What Slashdot NEEDS (OK, what I want) is for an automated system that compares a submission with recent articles for similarity -- this is off-the-shelf stuff now. These could be weighted to favour more recent ones, but I leave the formula up to experimentation. This would be useful to present related links, as well as warning of possible dupes.

      I had a similar problem, editing a news site being fed articles from an office in Beijing. I had incredible trouble with the Chinese editors who never checked what was already on the site (this is the same day) and sent different versions of the same story (eg from Xinhua, China Daily, People's Daily). Wasted a huge amount of time. Not to mention the typos -- they couldn't be fucked to use a spellchecker, check URLS, etc. It's dead and buried now of course.

    15. Re:Another Duplicate.... by SirCrashALot · · Score: 2, Funny

      Like the one ring. It must be destroyed in the mountain that created it.

    16. Re:Another Duplicate.... by perljon · · Score: 1

      Actually, using electron scanning microscopes, you can see almost every change to a harddisk. Writing to it 1000 times wouldn't be good enough. That's why hard drives that once held top secret information are melted by the government. (Well, at least the platters are removed and melted.)

      --
      This isn't the sig you are looking for... Carry on...
    17. Re:Another Duplicate.... by 3vi1 · · Score: 1

      Uhmmm... if Taco didn't read the comments the first time it was submitted, what makes anyone think he'll read this one and find out it's a dupe? :)

    18. Re:Another Duplicate.... by WetCat · · Score: 1

      Thank you, got ISA SCSI adaptor for $4!
      Good idea

  2. how many more times by alta · · Score: 0, Funny

    do we have to hear this story?

    Now here's a story, slashdot editors read slashdot!

    --
    Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for they are subtle, and quick to anger.
  3. well... by mschoolbus · · Score: 3, Funny

    I found a bunch of Spice Girl stuff (3GB+) on my friends 'broken' hard drive he gave me... I was sorta afraid when I saw that, really makes me wonder about him...

    1. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By stuff do you mean porn?

    2. Re:well... by Hydrogenoid · · Score: 1

      No wonder it broke...
      That's a nasty thing to do to a poor HD...

    3. Re:well... by Gleng · · Score: 1

      "I found a bunch of Spice Girl stuff (3GB+) on my friends 'broken' hard drive he gave me... I was sorta afraid when I saw that, really makes me wonder about him..."

      Off topic, but that kind of reminds me about the time I went to make tea in a friends kitchen and, while searching for the cups, discovered his collection of what must have been well over 500 old TV guides.

      I was very, very scared. It kind of had a Norman Bates feel to it.

      --
      "Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
    4. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a hoot ! Ties in nicely with the old memory of Gary Glitter taking his machine for repair a few years ago in the UK, and the PC repair place found lots of porn (was it kiddie porn?) on the machine. After the UK 'press' got wind of the story th Spice Girls dropped him from their movie in which he had an appearance.

      Not sure if he had attempted to erase the porn or if he was so dumb that he forgot it was there.

  4. Datamining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read this last week, something about datamining.

  5. Slashdot must be using these old hard drives by PD · · Score: 2, Funny

    How else can we explain how the editors are finding these old stories?

    1. Re:Slashdot must be using these old hard drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Wrong! I stumbled across one of Taco's old drives on Ebay. Slashdot wasn't bookmarked or in the cache. Explains a lot.

  6. The neatest thing: by Damion · · Score: 3, Funny

    I found archives of old Slashdot stories and resubmitted them.

    --
    Common sense is what tells you the world is flat.
    1. Re:The neatest thing: by xao+gypsie · · Score: 0

      man, i am glad that this was a resubmission.....for a second there my concept of time was obliterated, and i wasnt sure where i was. kinda like deja vu while on acid..

      xao

      --


      xao
      http://TheHillforum.hopto.org
  7. CmdrTaco's HD located! by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 1, Funny

    Yikes!

    Looks like someone must have gotten ahold of CmdrTaco's recently discarded hard drive and recovered the links to old /. stories...

    You'd think Taco would have at least used some sort of freespace wiping utility!

    --
    "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
  8. Wierd files by mrtroy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well I bought a laptop back in the day...a p166 toshiba which to this day has enough power to word process...surf the internet, but unfortunately the battery and cdrom both died.
    Now when I bought it I thought it was kinda wierd...it was in like a crayola theme and had lots of kids games on it and stuff, but the guy I got it from said it was his kids. So I am about to format it, since it was full of junk and the little 2 gig hd was filled, when all of a sudden what do i discover but a c:\private\ dir!!!
    So...as any good person does I formatted without looking at it. *cough*
    Turns out daddy had a gay pron fetish!
    After being disgusted by this, especially since it was on his KIDS computer, I formatted and lived happily ever after.
    Now, if someone was to buy the laptop from me they would find plenty of straight pron on it!!!
    (and i just might leave it there as a little present)

    --
    [I can picture a world without war, without hate. I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it]
    1. Re:Wierd files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      euuuw!!! straight pr0n. I guess I dont really have room to speak. Maybe I should create a slashdot account and come out the closet.

    2. Re:Wierd files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, if someone was to buy the laptop from me they would find plenty of straight pron on it!!!
      (and i just might leave it there as a little present)


      Brilliant. The recipient will be mighty pleased with that if he gives that laptop to his kids to play with. Given the techo skills of Joe D., his kids are more likely to find that shit than he is.

    3. Re:Wierd files by Quazion · · Score: 3, Funny

      Maybe it was a present to you, maybe he tought you where gay ;-P

    4. Re:Wierd files by E1v!$ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe his wife was into it.

    5. Re:Wierd files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe he had a curious daughter.

    6. Re:Wierd files by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, maybe he also bought the computer used?

  9. Here's a duplicate FIRST POST!!!! by stratjakt · · Score: 0, Funny

    Just in case you missed the last one

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  10. It's all Taco... by devphil · · Score: 3, Funny


    I'm seriously considering blocking CmdrTaco from the list of people whose stories I see. If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

    Psssst, Taco. A hint for ya: just because you started the site doesn't absolve you of the duty of looking at it once in a while. Say, before you click "Submit."

    --
    You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
    1. Re:It's all Taco... by selderrr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't understand how this gets moderated as 'funny'... Anyway, the fact that it reaches +5 means that moderators agree with it. Now if only the message gets thru to the editors :-(

      Seriously taco & co : if once in a while someone posts trolls about dupes, you can mod them down and ignore them. But if 1 out of 5 posts gets a +5 remark, I think it really is time to consider actions.

      At least say sumtin about it. Right now, the editor attitude "hu, can't hear ya" is seriously giving the impression that they don't give a flying fuck about it.

    2. Re:It's all Taco... by limekiller4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Too bad there isn't a mechanism to meta-moderate slashdot stories for duplicates. That way you could filter out anything ranging from -1 (I don't care if it is a retread) to 5 (this has to be a beyond-all-doubt repost before I don't see it).

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    3. Re:It's all Taco... by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 1

      It seems like it would be simple to require keywords to be submitted along with a story, say "MIT, HARD DRIVE, EBAY, CREDIT CARD" or maybe even a one-line summary "MIT grads find credit card and other personal data on old hard drives purchased on ebay."

      Then do a keyword search and review any articles with a 60% or greater match that was submitted within the last two months to make sure that you aren't posting a dupe.

    4. Re:It's all Taco... by MyHair · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Anyway, the fact that it reaches +5 means that moderators agree with it.

      The moderators seem somewhat divided on the subject. Here are the moderations for that post as of now:

      Offtopic=2, Insightful=1, Interesting=1, Funny=5, Overrated=3, Underrated=1, Total=13

      It got a new funny in the time between when I first read it and the time I looked at the mods. I'm sure it will go down and up a few more times.

      Maybe I should post this as anonymous to avoid the Offtopic Karma hit. Nah, I'll just hit "No Karma Bonus" and feel the 2 point burn.

      By the way, the grandparent post says CmdrTaco does most of the dupes; in my experience it's Timothy who is the king of dupes. I want my money back. :-)

    5. Re:It's all Taco... by Storm · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

      Now remember, gang, he's a newlywed...He is in that magical time between "I'm a geek and never have a date." and marriage being old hat (or just old). The boy's (possibly for the first time since the site started) got something other than slashdot on his mind...

      --
      --Storm
    6. Re:It's all Taco... by Chexsum · · Score: 0

      No, you just look for unique links since news items usually include a link.

      NB. This has been said again and again but noone has added it - Taco should write the thing instead of spending his time duplicating posts. =\

      --
      Pixels keep you awake!
    7. Re:It's all Taco... by TheFrood · · Score: 1

      I'm seriously considering blocking CmdrTaco from the list of people whose stories I see. If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

      Actually, I think timothy is the worst about it. The problem is that timothy only seems to duplicate his own stories (how he manages to do that so often, I have no idea), so if you block timothy, you won't see those stories at all.

      TheFrood

      --
      If you say "I'll probably get modded down for this..." then I will mod you down.
    8. Re:It's all Taco... by blitzrage · · Score: 1

      Doesn't he get paid for this? He has to read stories and post them, and he can't check to see whether it's a duplicate? (Let alone a duplicate from last week. If he read anything on the front page, he would have even remembered it)

      --

      I have no signature
    9. Re:It's all Taco... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's no excuse to do a bad job.

    10. Re:It's all Taco... by haggar · · Score: 1

      Truth is, he's been doing it always. I guess I have developed a dilike for the guy, because I noticed his dupes since a couple of years ago.

      --
      Sigged!
    11. Re:It's all Taco... by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 3, Funny

      If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

      Those of us who are married know exactly what's going on here. When male human becomes married, all memory functions are relegated to the wife. I've been married for 10 years, and I do well to remember to wear pants, much less retain sufficient buffer space to run a news site.

    12. Re:It's all Taco... by Eil · · Score: 1


      Right now, the editor attitude "hu, can't hear ya" is seriously giving the impression that they don't give a flying fuck about it.

      Er, because they don't. It's always been like this and it's usually people with high UIDs that seem to think it's not normal. Malda has repeatedly said over and over again that Slashdot goes in the direction that he and rest of the crew in Holland, MI take it. They have the final word. Not the users. The attitude may seem dictatorial, but if popularity is the judge, it's been working for them pretty well it seems.

    13. Re:It's all Taco... by matt_fk · · Score: 1

      I read /. for the links.. not the lame comments moderated by lame moderators. This is probably the 18th.. or 19th comment I've read since I began reading /... and probably the 8th I've responded to. I've read it for a couple of years.. think *most* care about comments? I don't think so.. this is an MLP site.. simply put.

    14. Re:It's all Taco... by mhesseltine · · Score: 0

      There is. See here

      --
      Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
    15. Re:It's all Taco... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot must have found their stories in an used hard drive or something.

    16. Re:It's all Taco... by jmccay · · Score: 1

      Give Taco a break between Work, Anime, and being a Newly Wed he might miss a few stories. ;)

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    17. Re:It's all Taco... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would require that slashdot had a search function that worked.

    18. Re:It's all Taco... by machine+of+god · · Score: 1

      heh, I seriously think he reads it on slashdot, and thinks "hey, that's interesting, I'll post it to slashdot".

    19. Re:It's all Taco... by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      I don't understand how this gets moderated as 'funny'... Anyway, the fact that it reaches +5 means that moderators agree with it.

      Not necessarily. Moderators are not supposed to moderate depending on whether they agree with the poster or not. If it's a good, well thought out post, that deserves a +X value, regardless of whether you agree with it or not.

      Whether this guideline and reality match up is another matter.

    20. Re:It's all Taco... by dolmen.fr · · Score: 1

      This is the solution I thought.

      "Score 5 - Informative", if I had moderation points.

    21. Re:It's all Taco... by selderrr · · Score: 1

      hm... you could be right about that, but such an attitude would not only be dictatorial indeed, it also clashes with the wannabe-billboard-of-the-nerd-community-attitude.

      Let me explain : slashdot thrives on the horde of nerds that adhere to it. These nerds adhere to /. as a concept they themselves helped to grow into something amazing. They are the very food slashdot feeds on. If it wasn't for the nerds, /. wouldn't be where it is now. Rob recognises this (on his own website for instance) and embraces the community. But the /. editor flock goes further than this : they have an attitude which kinda claims some superiority and know-it-all when it comes to /. (not explicit, but not deniable either. I'm not eloquent enough to point it all out as I mean it, but I assume a regular reader understands what I mean. I'm not a native english speaker)

      Basically what I'm trying to say is that the momentum of the /. website comes from the sheer amount of readers behind it, not the editors themselves. They hold the rudder, but we *are* the boat. Okay indeed, the rudder controls the boat, but any good captain rspects its boat. And if the boat cracks to much, it will be taken care of by a good captain.
      With slashdot, I have the impression that we're on a leased boat. They *are* not the rudder anymore. They sold the rudder and te boat, and are now merely controlling it. and that's not a nice feeling.
      Now I'm not saying that malda & co should worship their readers or anything, but a certain amount of grattitude and respect for the momentum that they receive from their reader base would be appropriate. And IMHO, grattitude is best expressed by doing your job with a sufficient amount of care and attention. Which I miss a bit...

      Doh... I ramble too much. Sorry.

    22. Re:It's all Taco... by MrPink2U · · Score: 1

      So stop reading them. Dupe post, dupe post! People who bitch about it are more a waste of bandwidth than the post itself.

      As my momma always said, if you don't have something nice (I will even stretch and say constructive) to say, they don't say anything at all.

  11. Hmm... by egjertse · · Score: 1
    from the hasn't-anyone-heard-of-dd dept.

    Methinks someone else could do with a course in basic UNIX commandline tools... How about "grep" for instance?

    1. Re:Hmm... by AntiNorm · · Score: 1

      grep? What good would a text-searching utility do here? "Hasn't anyone heard of dd" refers to the write-files-or-binary-patterns-here utility which can be used to overwrite the 'secret' data this article refers to.

      --

      I pledge allegiance to the flag...
      of the Corporate States of America...
    2. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very very true. it should not be too hard to find duplicate stories.
      Mod the parent up!

    3. Re:Hmm... by valisk · · Score: 1

      most of the fuckwits concerned use windows and have absolutley no idea what dd is, they would probably imagine it is something related a.d.d.
      That doesn't excuse large banking institutions who are definately not called 'MORGAN STANLEY' and use Solaris, because they should know better than to throw out all their old SS20s without cleaning those disks.

      --

      Economic Left/Right: -0.62
      Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.69
    4. Re:Hmm... by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      grep? What good would a text-searching utility do here? "Hasn't anyone heard of dd" refers to the write-files-or-binary-patterns-here utility which can be used to overwrite the 'secret' data this article refers to.

      Well, a text search of the slashdot archive for "MIT grad students buying old hard drives on Ebay" or something similar might have revealed that this story has already been posted.

      Unless, of course, Taco dd'ed over the archive...

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    5. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The archive is a MySQL database, not a flat text file. grep wouldn't be terribly helpful.

      http://cvs.slashcode.com/

  12. Aw hell.. by zomB1kenoB · · Score: 1

    You mean I can find GOOD STUFF on those old HDs if i don't wipe em first? Shit, I've been missing out. Damn my utter lack of curiosity.

    --
    What Would Satan Do?
    1. Re:Aw hell.. by satterth · · Score: 1
      Hell, we used to do this all the time.

      When ever we would get rid of an old used drive, we would fill the damn thing up with random garbage. TV comercials, stupid movie clips, crazy funny songs, and what ever else we could think of. My personal favorite were corrupted word documents of random text.

      Our thinking behind this was, if people are going to search the drive and profile you, we might as well keep them entertained.

      I can just imagine the time people would take going through all the garbage. One time a guy came back to us fustrated that he couldn't open the word DOC's... LOL

      --
      Being called a dork on Slashdot must be like being called the retard in special ed.
  13. In related news ... by vogon+jeltz · · Score: 1, Funny

    WWII is over and Soviet Russia ceased to exist ...
    Come on Taco, do you ever read your own site?

  14. What do I see on old hard drives? by stienman · · Score: 5, Funny

    I see duplicates. They're everywhere - they don't even know they're duplicates...

    -Adam

  15. HEHE by RedWolves2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Some MIT kid in the future is going to stumble across the Slashdot hard drives and go "God Damn they posted Duplicates alot."

  16. snippet & loink to original SF Gate article by HealYourChurchWebSit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Discarded computer hard drives prove a trove of personal info
    • So, you think you cleaned all your personal files from that old computer you got rid of?
    • Two MIT graduate students suggest you think again.
    • Over two years, Simson Garfinkel and Abhi Shelat bought 158 used hard drives at secondhand computer stores and on eBay
    --
    --- have you healed your church website?
  17. Morals? by Pooh22 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've rarely used second hand disks, but even if I did I'd just not look at what's on it. It's kind of like not looking in the neighbour's trashkan...

    Of course, that's no excuse for companies to leave sensitive data from their customers on their leftovers!

    Simon

    1. Re:Morals? by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      Well, kinda.
      Except you'll never see your neighbour.

      I don't see any problem in looking, it might even give you some insight into other people.
      Just don't do anything bad with the data. (I'm thinking right hand and some Kleenex)

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    2. Re:Morals? by blurfus · · Score: 1

      Except, of course, that it's not somebody else's stuff anymore.
      It's YOURS after you buy it. I think you would have every right to look at (and inspect) everything you buy, specially second hand.

      The neighbours trash can is not yours (it is still the neighbours). But when does the neighbour give up ownership of the items? Once the items are in the can or once the items left the can? (you can then claim finders-keepers I guess).

      But say, for example, you buy an used car and after purchasing it you start cleaning it out and find a whole bunch of pr0n mags below the seat.

      You open one mag up (of course =o) ) and find a credit card receipt for the susbcription payments. All the info you need is right there.

      How is this inmoral?

      Of course, the right thing to do is to shred the info (and toss the mags, if you must) and get on with using your car. It would be unethical to take advantage of the goodies you found.

      Unless you are a crook (then BINGO!)
      cheers

      --
      will work for Karma
    3. Re:Morals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's kind of like not looking in the neighbour's trashkan...

      Yes, but what if your neighbor SOLD you his trashcan?

    4. Re:Morals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's kind of like not looking in the neighbour's trashkan..."

      There is some moral code implied here that not everyone subscribes to. I'm certainly not above taking other peoples' trash when it is useful to me! I've acquired LOTS of good stuff that way, and I don't see any harm in it. Actually, I see it as a benefit becuase otherwise, useful stuff would end up in the landfill, wasted.

    5. Re:Morals? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If you bought a trash can from a neighbor, you would look in it. Actually, you SHOULD look onto it. There might be something on there that could incriminate its owner, AKA you, for crimes of the previous owner.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:Morals? by Forgotten · · Score: 1

      Except, of course, that it's not somebody else's stuff anymore. It's YOURS after you buy it. I think you would have every right to look at (and inspect) everything you buy, specially second hand.

      Doubtful. Consider that you never own the copyrighted-by-others software on your drive (including the GPL stuff), only an explicit licence to use it. Data on the drive that you author or even just compile will likely still belong to you, regardless of the fact that you've sold the media. In the case of deleted or overwritten data this is even more defencible, especially with legislation like the DMCA - deletion here would be the "copy-protection" method (remember that the data must be copied to be represented in a manner that humans can use, even if only into RAM).

      In the case of your collection of TS/TG porn images and movies, the drive purchaser certainly won't own them, because you probably didn't in the first place (most porn being pirated almost ad infinitum from the moment it first appears on the net). Unless, of course, you make original porn of yourself - in which case, my hat's off.


    7. Re:Morals? by blurfus · · Score: 1
      You're right... I stand corrected...

      However, the stuff I was referring to was the actual hard drive. You still have the right to inspect its contents and I do not believe this is inmoral (refering back to the original question here which was: is it moral to look at the HD's contents?)

      Sure, you don't necessarily own the data contained in it (just like you don't own the credit card number found in the mag subscription receipt); but there is nothing inmoral (IMHO) in looking at (or inspecting) the goods purchased second hand.

      --
      will work for Karma
  18. I found... by Zathrus · · Score: 0

    ... this story. Freaky thing is, the hard drive wasn't even that old.

  19. MATRIX GLITCH ! by LePrince · · Score: 2, Funny

    Arrgh, I saw the cat pass twice... Errr, the post twice ! :-)

    (Note to moderator : this is a pityful attempt at humor, to get my karma from bad to neutral, since my first 2 posts were rated -1 and ever since I can't post that will get read, and my two other posts weren't offensive, so I deserve better). :-)

  20. 8 DRPMs, new record? by TobiasSodergren · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The 2 first minutes, 16 comments about this being a dupe were posted. Thats about 8 Dupe Reports Per Minute. What's the all time high?

    1. Re:8 DRPMs, new record? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was aiming for funny, but interesting? Oh well :)

  21. Some things I found by baryon351 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've come across quite a few older drives in machines that hadn't been cleaned out. One was an ancient Mac II which used to be used as a webserver, but was removed from that job in 1995, and had sat in a basement getting rustier and rustier. It was given to me in horrific condition, and the motherboard/PSU was toast, almost like it was washed through with saltwater. The HD looked a little better, and on firing it up in another machine, it clattered noisily, but still read most of the drive - on there was the website, last accessed 8 years ago. I copied that all off and archived it just because it was cool.

    Oddly, the website nowadays isn't all that different :).

    Another belonged to a rather fascinating lady who seemed to use her computer from 1994 when it was new, until 2002 when I came across it from an ebay sale. All of her writing (some published, some not), drafts, her academic work, and her photography was on there. She did quite a few nudes and not only had published work, but every photo taken in between used to create those images. Slightly giggleworthy, but really just rather tasteful nude photos.

    One other I was given, a compaq 486, belonged to an organiser of some of the behind the scenes work for the Sydney Olympics - it had names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of celebrities, politicians, and anyone involved in the marketing pre-games, along with correspondence to those people. A fun read but kind of boring - I didn't keep the addresses either.

    The biggest coincidence I came across was ordering a computer from ebay, from a town about 800km from me. it came to me with a HD full of various word documents - what a surprise to find it had originally been used as a wordprocessing machine in the same building I work in, and several years before. It came home :).

    Nothing amazingly exciting, just a few curious little moments.

    1. Re:Some things I found by commanderfoxtrot · · Score: 1

      One other I was given, a compaq 486, belonged to an organiser of some of the behind the scenes work for the Sydney Olympics - it had names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of celebrities, politicians, and anyone involved in the marketing pre-games, along with correspondence to those people. A fun read but kind of boring - I didn't keep the addresses either.

      Damn; you could have given those other chaps the Aussie PM's email address...

      --
      http://blog.grcm.net/
  22. Offtopic, but more interesting than this thread. by PaKettle · · Score: 4, Funny

    Check out the photoshop that's going on over at Fark: unlikely Slashdot articles.

  23. repost question... by gsfprez · · Score: 0, Funny

    why don't the editors try doing something.. like "EDITING" the site?

    when there is a dup story, whack the dup. This isn't fscking rocket science.. or even bad coding.

    are they afraid of committing a "Winston Smith in the Ministry of Slashdot" evil that would make whacking dups a "Bad Idea"? If there is, i'm missing it.

    (/me paypals $10 to Dr. Evil and Mini Me for the overuse of quotation marks in this post, so stop bitching)

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
  24. From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by jot445 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please! If a story is a dupe, so what? Here's a thought. Don't read it. Don't even comment. Don't even "just say no". (OK, so that was several thoughts ;-)
    Get outside, breathe the fresh air, and quit trying to come up with clever quotes that express your angst over a duplicate/semi-duplicate story.</RANT>

    SET MODE KarmaTracking=ON
    SET MODE ModeratorSuckup=ON

    --
    The preceding comment has been reviewed and declared to be compliant with HIPPA Phase II regulations.
    1. Re:From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by grub · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sorry, you can't train a stupid dog by ignoring the shit on the floor, you have to use a rolled up newspaper on its ass and stick the dog's nose in the turd.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by _xeno_ · · Score: 1
      You know, if dupes were an occasional thing, I'd agree with you. But they aren't. They're practically a weekly occurance. And it's annoying. The tag line is "News for Nerds" not "Repeats for Nerds." You can forgive an occasional accidental dupe. You can easily forgive a dupe from several months ago. This is a dupe from last week and is practically identical to the original.

      If the writeup had at least made reference to the older story and made clear that this thread is supposed to be about interesting data found on "old" harddrives, then I would agree with you. But from the post it sounds like CmdrTaco hasn't even checked from last week to ensure that this isn't a duplicate.

      This is their job. They are trying to get people to support them through subscriptions. Before I'd subscribe, I'd have to see some kind of perfessionalism. To be perfectly honest, the only reason I stick around Slashdot is not because of the editors but because of the community already here. Without the community, I wouldn't bother reading, because it wouldn't be worth reading. Posting dupes and generally not checking the stories they are posting make it seem like the editors don't care about the site anymore and make the community feel like they're being neglected.

      Don't forget, a lot of the original very vocal Slashdotters already moved to another community. The lack of professionalism on the part of the editors is annoying and a slap in the face of the people for who the site is run. It would be very nice to have the editors explain that they are at the very least doing something to try and prevent duplicates. As things stand, it seems that the editors aren't listening to the community and are just ignoring us.

      (Mind you - this goes both ways. It seems that a vocal group of Slashdotters feel that the editors "owe" the posters, while the editors seem to feel that the posters "owe" the Slashdot crew. Neither is true. Slashdot as we know it needs both. Without either, it would be nothing. "Slashdot" owes both the community and the editors for its existance.)

      That's why you see people complaining about dupes. It let's them vent steam and hopefully get a message to the editors that they want change and hope that the editors will pay more attention and hopefully admit that they can screw up. The fact that they're getting modded up indicates that there are many people who agree with them. In this case, I feel that the bitching is justified.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    3. Re:From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      This site is mostly read by Americans and I think CmdrDupo is an American. It's well known by the rest of the world that you have to say things over and over to try and get Americans to understand it. Eg. hollywood movies. Hence the dupe posting. We should be culturally tolerant of Taco's need to service his people's intellectual capacity.

    4. Re:From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehe...
      perfessionalism...
      what a dork...

    5. Re:From the My-God-Will-Ya'll-Quit-Bitchin'-Dept by _xeno_ · · Score: 1

      Come again?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  25. Probably why it's on BBC anyway... by guusbosman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Again a story that has been posted a little while ago. I won't rant about reading your own website or getting decent editors... not this time.

    But I wouldn't be surprised if one of the factors for the attention BBC gives to this project is the fact that is has been on Slashdot.

    Nice circle :)

  26. Oh the irony.... by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 2, Funny

    There have to be 20 dupes about the fact that this is a dupe. Of course, I'm guessing this has already been pointed out...

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
    1. Re:Oh the irony.... by JimDabell · · Score: 1

      The obvious solution is to only post to point out that a story isn't a duplicate. Much less effort.

    2. Re:Oh the irony.... by threeturn · · Score: 1

      Damn I was going to say that! Oh well, dupes are the new black.

  27. from criminal defense law firm by jqh1 · · Score: 1

    Well, I for one didn't get around to posting on the first run :)

    I once bought a HD from a storefront computer shop. Everything had been deleted, but it was so easy to undelete that I couldn't resist -- there were dozens of documents from a criminal law practice specializing in parole related procedures. Nothing terribly interesting, but definitely another lesson in the pitfalls of attorney-client privilege in the electronic age...

    --
    who's moderating the meta-moderators?
    1. Re:from criminal defense law firm by legojenn · · Score: 1
      IANAL, just a nerdy Legal Assistant,

      It would seem that solicitor-client privilege is maintained were these communications end up on a prosecuting attorney's . I know in Canada that it is. I could research this if taken to task. A google search revealed this site that described the status of solicitor-client privilege in various countries. (OLD-2000)

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    2. Re:from criminal defense law firm by mark_lybarger · · Score: 1

      nerdy Legal Assistant

      you'll be tarred and gzipped and perhaps feathered too for using a term such as that 'round these parts. nerdy applies to neither legal nor assistant. i it person who surfs /. using win98 at home for games only while using IE at work because it's the standard while posting duplicate posts about duplicate stories on a day when the other nerdy people are all anxiously waiting the release of the wonderfull kde 3.1 with all its glorious eye-candy so that we can claim to use it at home while we're not gaming of course.

    3. Re:from criminal defense law firm by legojenn · · Score: 1
      ... but I don't have Windows 98 at home. I really don't. I have Slackware, and Mandrake on various PCs, but no Windows 98. My laptop runs Windows 2000 or Slackware depending on what classes I'm doing in college during any particular semester. I don't use KDE, but I am anxious for Slack 8.2 or 9.0 (whatever it will be called) to be released so I can use GNOME 2. I guess I could compile it myself, but I am too busy and Patrick et al do it so well. That doesn't mean I don't like games, that's what a boyfriend's computer is for.

      I apologise for using the term 'nerdy' inappropriately. I would have responded to you more directly, but the only complete sentence you used was you'll be tarred and gzipped and perhaps feathered too for using a term such as that 'round these parts. The rest was unintelligible. I guess the inability to communicate is what makes one 'nerdy'.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    4. Re:from criminal defense law firm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it seems there were only 2 sentences in that post, eh? the second might have been a rather lame attempt at humor.

      I guess the inability to communicate is what makes one 'nerdy'.

      that's a feature, not a bug!

    5. Re:from criminal defense law firm by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      Dropline installer from dropline gnome will get you a full Gnome 2 desktop w/o the need to compile anything! Farmiliar installer too.
      I suggest you try it out.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
  28. Data Mining... for BRAINS! by HomerNet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1.) All right allready! We now have established beyond a shadow of a doubt that yes, a similar story was posted earlier this week.


    2.) It amuses me that people seem to think that /. editors have so much time on their hands that all they have to do all day is read headline and forum posts. That's what moderators and metamoderators are for, and they may not catch every story that comes down the pike.


    3.) Perhaps the most enjoyable "data mining" find on an old hard drive for me was over 1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them. They now make up the bulk of my music library.

    --
    I have no tag line
    1. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Informative

      2.) It amuses me that people seem to think that /. editors have so much time on their hands that all they have to do all day is read headline and forum posts. That's what moderators and metamoderators are for, and they may not catch every story that comes down the pike.

      If deciding what story submissions get posted based on content and similarity to recent stories isn't an editor's job, I'd like to know what is.

      Your comment about that being what mods and meta-mods are for would be true on a site like k5, but until moderators can mod stories off the front page here, that's what the editors are supposed to be for.

    2. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with all of your points and applaud your use of the three point speaking method and in conclusion: blow me.

      thank you

    3. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if my alzheimer riddled brain can still remember the original article I'd think that the young buck editors would be able to.

    4. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Alsee · · Score: 2, Funny

      1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them.

      I can't help picturing you walking into a video dating service, watching 10 tapes, and after rejecting the ones you don't like you announce you'd like to date 9 and a half of them :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.) All right allready! We now have established beyond a shadow of a doubt that yes, a similar story was posted earlier this week.

      Yup.

      2.) It amuses me that people seem to think that /. editors have so much time on their hands that all they have to do all day is read headline and forum posts. That's what moderators and metamoderators are for, and they may not catch every story that comes down the pike.

      It's their job, which they are being paid to do. Editors for major newspapers have a hell of a lot more articles to consider. I've never seen a duplicate story in a paper, but if they do happen, it's a world less frequently than slashdot.

      3.) Perhaps the most enjoyable "data mining" find on an old hard drive for me was over 1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them. They now make up the bulk of my music library.

      Without a doubt, porn makes up the bulk of data on any used HD I get ahold of. Most of it's really disturbing and winds up deleted (for good this time), though. There's a lot of sick and twisted people out there.

    6. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by HomerNet · · Score: 2, Funny
      I said:

      1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them.



      You said:
      I can't help picturing you walking into a video dating service, watching 10 tapes, and after rejecting the ones you don't like you announce you'd like to date 9 and a half of them :)

      Heh! :) I did say that I had over 1000...

      --
      I have no tag line
    7. Re:Data Mining... for BRAINS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously we need a tax on used hard drives, to be paid to the good people at the RIAA.

  29. How about LANs? by toddestan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I find it most interesting at places where lots of computers are hooked up to a network, like at a college dorm. It's amazing the clueless dolts that share their entire harddrive over the network. You can learn a lot by browsing someone's internet cache. Also, since Windows seems to share My Documents by default, you can read people's homework (usually boring as hell though). About the most interesting was the person sharing all of their instant messaging chat logs. Lets just say that person got around a lot... The only thing is that you have to be careful, these people who are that clueless usually have a ton of virii, so don't click on goatse.ch.vbs!

    1. Re:How about LANs? by dunkstr · · Score: 1

      I had a friend of mine saying that while looking through the university network she found a picture of ME on some random windows share. Evidently, I found this mildly disturbing as I have about two pictures of me on the web. The irritating thing is that she can't find the share anymore so I can't find out who this person is...

    2. Re:How about LANs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha!

    3. Re:How about LANs? by ArcCoyote · · Score: 1

      Most people who get around a lot have a ton of virii!

    4. Re:How about LANs? by linux_student · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have known that for quite awhile on the university network, there are people sharing all kinds of $h!t: Homework (even read a guys term paper), pr0n, warez, pictures...My desktop wallpaper was taken from the university's digital imaging center's hard drive as well. If you really want to be a whore about this, there is a software package called ShareScan that works really well...

  30. Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I know you don't care, but I was changing out a certain head priest's hard drive for a Catholic organization(Something to do with a Little Flower) in Chicago, and I was moving his documents and found a folder that was holding a few letters to an S&M house down in Springfield saying that he wanted some services and he was a single salesmen from Milwaukee...well he got the single part right.

    Not to make this too long, but the funny part is they got pretty explicate about what he was wanting, and when I asked him if he wanted me to scratch and reinstall windows on the hard drive before I moved it over to the convent where the head Mother was going to be using it, he told me no, and I just went and installed it on here desk....God only knows how that went over?

    1. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why has this been modded up? It's obviously bullshit.

    2. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Snooping through user files is considered bad form by any self respecting admin. It's also dangerous. A lot of filesystems record access times. Going where you're not supposed to be can be grounds for dismissal. Is looking at someone else's pr0n worth your job?

    3. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hell yeah!

    4. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

      Actually, given all the scandals that have plaqued the CatLick Church lately, who WOULDN'T believe it? That is, unless you're a drone.

      --
      "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    5. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by mister_jpeg · · Score: 1

      Of course it's bullshit.
      The mod points were given to reward the 11 grammar/spelling errors in two short paragraphs.

      --
      -jpeg
    6. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not bullshot and no I didn't spell check it you english grammar asshole. I was just posting. If all you got is to argue that I am wrong because my spelling is bad, then I got a floopy with the docs on it to prove I'm right. Not to get into anything with you but why can't preist be worng every now and again, and when was the last time you went without getting any? I couldn't last for long, andI would think that by now most of us would understand that a percentage of the preist go in because they are a bit disturbed, and think that the church can help. I grew up going to Catholic school and have talked to all of the father and brothers over the years, and most of them admit they have sexual issues at some point. Either to much, or not enough.

      Spell Check was turned off.

    7. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh man, lighten up. the spelling/grammar comment was a joke.
      Re the actual content of your post: no one doubts in the abstract that men of the cloth may have sexual pecadilloes, but an AC claiming to have a 'floopy' full of docs is hard to believe.
      Not that you're going to do so, but you could have dispelled some doubt by not posting anonymously. I'd still have problems believing a person who stole documents from a priest.

    8. Re:Cathlic Church Hard Drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      touch -r PR0N.jpg /tmp/timestamp
      xv PR0N.jpg
      touch -ar /tmp/timestamp PR0N.jpg
      rm /tmp/timestamp

  31. The road less travelled by Bleeblah · · Score: 0

    I found a Yahoo IM session log on the HD of someone's admin assistant. She recounted to a friend about having anal sex with someone in the building's basement storage area.

  32. sweet by adamruck · · Score: 0, Funny

    I love it when the post dups

    -dont have to read article, already did
    -can karma whore just by copying the high rated posts

    --
    Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
  33. Need DataEraser by bladeohlsson · · Score: 0

    This is a huge problem. You should use some kind of data erasing software when disposing or selling a computer if you are of the following: If you are in a security conscious environment and need to prevent inadvertent access to data A computer IT professional for a company that erases employee PCs for replacement or transfer of use A computer service, repair, or maintenance technician that replaces drives for customers with hardware problems If you are re-using or returning a leased PC If you are recycling, donating or transferring PCs to other users A leasing or recycling center that recycles hard disk drives from one computer to another A used PC reseller or auction site that needs to delete all data from donated hard drives prior to resale An asset management or disposal company OR IF YOU HAVE ANY OF THIS ON YOUR PC: Financial data Email Internet History Personal documents Sales contact information Product development plans Marketing plans Trade secrets HERE IS a link to some DataEaser software. This is in Japanese, the software runs in English though. HOMEPAGE: http://www.ontrack-japan.com/software/DataEraser.h tml SPECS: http://www2.ontrack-japan.com/download/de/DE-UserM anual.pdf

    --
    http://www.ohlssonvox.com
  34. A simple script by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 4, Informative
    dd if=/dev/urand bs=100k count=100 of=garbage
    while cat garbage garbage ; do true ; done | dd bs=100k of=/dev/hdaX

    You could put it on a floppy Linux distribution and sell it to windows users who want to wipe their disks .. $20 a pop!
    (or better yet -- a bootable CD business card so you could include the source).

    Just don't let your 5 year old nephew get hold of it -- or else!

    --
    OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    1. Re:A simple script by droid_rage · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not quite that simple.
      Yeah, that would work for newer desktops, but OnTrack, which sells disk wiping software (the only one I know, since that's what we use), also has a decent collection of basic SCSI drivers on their disk. You can load other drivers from a floppy if yours isn't there.

      Incidentally, the US government requires triple-overwrite on any computers leaving government facilities, and for anything sensitive they wipe it, then drill holes through the disk. Yes, I know this for a fact. I have done IT work for a government site.

    2. Re:A simple script by tbj61898 · · Score: 1

      Thank you,
      I just blow up my second hard disk just to test the script.

      --
      nop, nop, nop #VBLANK
    3. Re:A simple script by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that still the standard (triple-write and drill)? Because it's hopelessly dated. A disk that merely has holes could still be (carefully) read in the mechanism, let alone by MFM. And current skill with signal analysis makes three writes nowhere near enough, regardless of the bit pattern.

      The only way to guarantee previously written data can never be recovered from a disk is to destroy the media - preferably melt it down and recycle it. Really, HD manufacturers could offer this as an expensive service, much as other certified services exist for this kind of stuff (disks could be delivered in smashed-up form).

    4. Re:A simple script by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 2, Funny
      I just blow up my second hard disk just to test the script.

      I do hope you were joking, because I just laughed my head off, when I read it.

      Just in case you weren't joking, I'll reiterate the lesson that you (should have) learned here:

      • Never run random programs if you don't have at least a rudimentary understanding of what it'll do.

      My social debt being paid, this gives me flashbacks to the days of BSD 4.0 (we're talking the original BSD -- not the freeBSD, openBSD, etc). It was back at a time when a color text terminal might have been a show-stopper at Comdex. Color not being available, the BSD people decided to set up ls(1) so that, when printing to a terminal, it would run in '-F' mode -- indicating directories with a trailing /, executables with a '*' and unprintable characters with a '?'.

      This was also in the early days of rogue (precursor to hack). accidently hitting the 's'ave function read-filename routine was the one part of rogue where hitting 'esc' wouldn't back you out. If you hit 'esc' 'enter', it would save your rogue session with a name of 'esc'. For wierd anti-cheat reasons, the save file was also executable.

      Well one day this new grad student walks by and asks me for some help. lots of his files were missing and, whenever he explained his predicament to any knowledgable user/sysadmin type, they would literally ROTFL.

      After I solemnly promised not to laugh, he explained that rogue had created this wierd file and he'd wanted to delete it. Next thing he knows, he gets a bunch of error messages and all his files are gone. Since it appeard on his screen as '*?" (escape key as name, and executable), he'd typed in

      rm *?
      After the few seconds of silence that it took to hold down my composure, I explained to him that
      1. *? was evaluated by the shell as a wildcard for any file with at least one character in it's name
      2. (this was not long after star wars) There was a unix-universe StarWars spoof making the rounds of usenet (nee netnews) .. In 'DecWars', Darth Vadic was building his deadly, filesystem crunching 'arem star' (pronounced 'rm *'). This poor sod, had managed to unwittingly managed to live Vadic's dream and unleashed the full power of "the Empire's ultimate program: the Are-Em Star". -- albeit on his own file system.
      The only consolation I could give him was that he'd brightened up many sysadin's days, and he hadn't used the '-r' (rebel base?) option, so his subdirectories were safe.
      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    5. Re:A simple script by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
      and for anything sensitive they wipe it, then drill holes through the disk.

      I've generally been of the opinion that the only way to be absolutely sure that old data could never be recovered from a disk was 'judicious application of a blast furnace'.

      In any case, for the person who feels that triple-write was a bit excessive for today's bit densities: One poster back in the 80's noted that his company found that the rules for securely erasing disks that had been used on test systems by 'sensitive' government organizations was so onerous that it was cheaper to just melt them down. When you consider that, back then, a 40MB hard disk (on a 14" multihead platter) would set you back $5digits, I think it's fair to say that they did far more than 3 overwrites back then.

      To give you an idea of the lengths to which spies will go to decode really sensitive data, some of the russian secret messages intercepted in the late 40's and thought to be about nuclear weapons espionage were still being decoded in the early 80's (as far forward as FOI requests for this sort of data will get you).

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    6. Re:A simple script by msim · · Score: 1

      When i worked in the Australian Govt in the IT sector, one of the lead admin's had a silvery lump on his desk he used as a paperweight.

      When asked about it, he told me that it used to be the hard disk in the laptop of one of the heads of the Dept of Foreign Affairs, and security policy for the computer hardware of someone of that rank meant that the dead hard disk was required to be melted.

      --

      Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know when your gonna get food poisoning.
    7. Re:A simple script by tbj61898 · · Score: 1

      Hey BCC (Black Copter Control),
      don't worry I was only joking! ;)

      I'll have to admit:
      some months ago, I decided to stop using an hibrid windows/Linux machine and to drop off windows. A dual boot machine is nearly useless for me, since I really don't like to reboot every time I need to switch OS (and I don't need to switch OS, thanks to wine and plex86). So I bang in slack and times passed by.

      One night I back home, I was really drunk. Well, it was about 4am, so I sit down in front of slack, I started Evolution, checked mail and I find out a friend of me telling to check a site for a nice flash movie.

      Ok, go on mozilla, ROAR, navigate to that site, find out the link... and HANG. Mozilla hanged, probably the bastard flash player. Ok, let's try once more. Open mozilla, go to the site, follow the link, killall mozilla.

      You must know that my patience is VERY limited when I'm drunk, especially in front of a gray-buzzing-box with some gadget (say:mouse and keyb) attached.

      Suddenly my self control went down, alcool fills up my skull and I banged in my Windows CD.

      I was able to see the flash movie in two hour, but since I was drunk I drop something like 7000 audio files, some gb of videos and lots of other files. As you now, critical documents have backups, and backups sometimes work. It worked.

      That night I learned a lesson: never NEVER manage my partition table while drunk, especially when I have to repartition disc one, and I edit partition on disc two.

      Andrè

      --
      nop, nop, nop #VBLANK
    8. Re:A simple script by droid_rage · · Score: 1

      True, but with oxidation and triple-wipe, anything recoverable will probably be gotten using an electron microscope. Maybe they sent some off to be melted, but there wasn't anything on-site that I know of that could melt a HD. There was some sensitive data where I worked, but nothing the Russians or anybody with the processing power and financial backing handy for the job were likely to want. Mostly just lies from the 50s and 60s they wanted to keep from the American public, probably.

  35. Note to Mods: Clearly OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    I'm not trying to bash baryon, but really, is this the place to be discussing information gleaned from old hard drives?

    Every other poster has managed to stay within the confines of this discussion, which is clearly about Duplicate stories being posted to Slashdot.

    I don't think it's fair to them, or the rest of the readers, if this post doesn't get modded down to -1 Offtopic.

    1. Re:Note to Mods: Clearly OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      uhh "What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?" he's well within the topic, which is not about duplicate /. articles //fly//

    2. Re:Note to Mods: Clearly OT by gabec · · Score: 1

      Nah, you'll probably find that his entry is a duplicate... just copy/pasted from the last time this discussion was posted!

    3. Re:Note to Mods: Clearly OT by SethDev · · Score: 1

      I'm not trying to bash Mr. Coward, but really, is this the place to be discussing duplicate stories being posted to Slashdot?

      Every other poster has managed to stay within the confines of this discussion, which is clearly about information gleaned from old hard drives.

      I don't think it's fair to them, or the rest of the readers, if this post doesn't get modded down to -1 Offtopic. ;)

    4. Re:Note to Mods: Clearly OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please see a doctor at once, your humor transplant has been rejected.

  36. You are in a maze of twisty little stories... by hoggoth · · Score: 0, Redundant

    You are in a maze of twisty little stories, all alike.

    nuff said.

    --
    - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    1. Re:You are in a maze of twisty little stories... by perky · · Score: 1

      George, is that you?

      --
      "The new wave is not value-added; it's garbage-subtracted" - Esther Dyson, Dec 1994
    2. Re:You are in a maze of twisty little stories... by hoggoth · · Score: 1

      > George, is that you?

      Nope.

      Artoo Detoo, is that you?

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
  37. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I spat chunks out my nose when i read it!

  38. Not quite a duplicate ... by dougmc · · Score: 1
    Yes, we've seen the story about the hard drives. Many times, in many different places.

    However, this part --

    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"
    is not a duplicate. I think the question would better fit into the Ask Slashdot section, but oh well ...

    Perhaps somebody was just trying to start up a discussion about things that have been left on harddrives, not about how many times we can call it a dup.

  39. Re:omfg, same story found on old hd! by Apro+im · · Score: 1

    Only 15?

  40. I leave all sorts on my drives by MartinG · · Score: 1

    But it doesn't matter of course because I use crypto-loop for exactly these reasons.

    --
    -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  41. something interesting I found by catwh0re · · Score: 4, Funny
    when digging through an old work hard drive other than finding the usual outdated business documents and porn. I also found someone's personal stash of sort of secret info files they were keeping tabs on everyone in the office, *cuts and pastes*:

    "Tuesday 8th of February 1997, Tony is pissing me off today, he's already taken 4 coffee breaks, sticking me with the rest of the work, note to self report to boss. Julie is looking rather sexy today, comment to her at lunch about lovely blouse."

    It got spicy here and there and read like a badly written journal, still it was great to read about the daily intricate moments that one of my ex collegues had felt.

    1. Re:something interesting I found by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is off topic, but your post reminded me of a little trick I did to a boss who was much the same as your ex-colleague

      Boss would often read through co-workers mail, having access to do so given to him for some reason by admin. Pulling strings with political weight, that kind of thing. he had no responsibility to - others in the organisation kept tabs on what was in mail, but he HAD to know what others were doing.

      So knowing my coworker in the next cubicle wouldn't be back for a week, I sent her a message with a file recorded by a friend shouting "I am a stickybeaking cunt who reads katherine's mail". Sure enough, boss opens kath's mail, opens the recording, and is loudly branded a stickybeaking cunt who reads kaths mail.

      I felt better after that, and remembered to warn kath about her mail surprise when she came back.

    2. Re:something interesting I found by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      Uh, in February 1997, the 8th was a Saturday, not a Tuesday.

      I'll leave conclusions to the reader. :)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    3. Re:something interesting I found by Kizzle · · Score: 1

      Those would make a great website.

  42. I once repaided Garry Glitter's computer and... by brejc8 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Errr Id better not tell this one.

    1. Re:I once repaided Garry Glitter's computer and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      guess you never worked on old Pete's computer did ya?

  43. Don't think of it as a dupe by IainHere · · Score: 3, Funny

    Think of it as an opportunity for even the dimmest of slashdotters to appear funny - go grabbing the funniest comments from the original story! For example:

    "Luckily for me, my Ebay'd hard drives are safe: I only sell broken ones."

    "Two MIT grad students bought used drives from eBay and secondhand computer stores.
    Don't I feel inferior. I've done the same with used HD's in the past and I only have a HS edumacation."

    "Your old HD is safe, I can get creditcard numbers faster on kazaa."

    "Was it Pete Townshend's drive?"

    "How do I destroy a HD? I just wait for my warranty to run out - it becomes unreadable shortly thereafter!"

  44. Number 8? Number 8? Your order is up by Gambit+Thirty-Two · · Score: 4, Funny

    One time when I came home from work, there was a PC by the dumpster at our apartment complex. I brought it in to harvest it for parts (never can have enough screws), and i decided to boot it up first to see what it was. Low end pentium, like a 75mhz. 8megs of ram. Ran DOS and Win 3.11.

    Turned out the machine used to be a Kiosk machine at a deli counter at a local grocery store. There wasnt TOO much of interest on it, but there was a huge list of peoples meat and cheese orders.

  45. The things you'll see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    About 6 months ago, I was taking out the trash in my apartment when I noticed a computer case next to the dumpster. Being the pack rat I am, I grabbed that baby and haulled it up to my room. It was absolutly caked in smoke and dust, so after an hour of totally cleaning it, I was ready to fire it up. The system was a 166 P1 and was in perfect working order, dispite the dust bunnies. Windows 95 loaded up painfully slow, but I managed. And the wealth of crap I found on there, lemme tell ya.

    The first thing I found was an exchange of messages between the previous owner and a company that had shipped him a crate of mushrooms. Yes, mushrooms. Apperantly, customs has distroyed his first order and he wanted the company to ship a replacement. But it doesn't stop here.

    The second thing I found was a pile of emails between the previous owner and his ex-girlfriend. Wow were they at eachothers necks. Apperantly, the previous owner was your average college drunkard and basically rapped this girl. I won't go into the specifics of it, but man, it was like watching a train wreck. I couldn't stop from reading every last juicy detail.

    Anyway, that was about it... not CC# or anything like that, just sex and drugs.

  46. quit yer bitchin' by Thud457 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    dumb-ass bicches bitching about bitch-ass duplicate stories!

    What you SHOULD be doing is running back to the original story to harvest the +5, insightful comments to whore yourself some karma with!

    (Is this recent God-awful response time in the comments.pl another misguied anti-troll attempt?!!)

    And yeah, I'm posting this logged in!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:quit yer bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Bitch ass moderators. Should be +5 funny, +5 insightful!

      That's O.K., I made it up on my prrof of concept post!

      AHAHAAHAHAHAHAHHHAHAHA! HOW DO YUO LIEK THEM APPELS, FELLOWS? GRABOULOUS!

  47. Shocking! by alfredw · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...MIT grads buying old hard discs from eBay and elsewhere, and finding credit card numbers, ATM transactions, porn and emails all accessible on them. Comments?

    Wow! I guess no one learned anything from the story last week!

    --
    In Soviet Russia, sig types you!
  48. Re:A simple script (grr) by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 2, Informative
    dd if=/dev/urand bs=100k count=100 of=garbage

    should be

    dd if=/dev/urandom bs=100k count=100 of=garbage

    (I was sure that I'd fixed that)

    --
    OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
  49. the last straw by DigiBoi · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    this is the straw that broke the camel's back. i will no longer read anything posted by CmdrTaco.

    --
    I put on my robe and wizard hat.
    1. Re:the last straw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, bye! Also, is your username an even lamer attempt at coolness than sk8rboi, Avril?

  50. READ THIS TACO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are an idiot. All you have to do is sit around on your fat ass and surf the web for a living, and you can't even get that right! What a sorry excuse for a human bean you are. If you worked for me, I would fire you. Your work is sloppy and you don't seem to give a damn. You are pathetic. I pity you.

  51. In further news... by grub · · Score: 1, Funny


    - The Allies win the war!
    - Einstein Dies!
    - Korea is a stalemate!
    - Al Gore invents the Internet!

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  52. Strange? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strangest thing I found on an old harddrive are old slashdot stories posted today as new

  53. From ... by Koyaanisqatsi · · Score: 1

    From the hasn't-anyone-heard-off dept

  54. Suggested new name for Slashdot: by The+Gline · · Score: 1

    Slashdotdotdotdotdotdot.

    --
    Honorary Member of Jackie Chan's Kung Fu Process Servers
    1. Re:Suggested new name for Slashdot: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about SlashDup?

  55. Slashdot is the matrix by Neophytus · · Score: 1

    And duplicate articles are the black cat.
    Something has 'changed' - watch out guys!

    1. Re:Slashdot is the matrix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Oh no! Look at your karma! Thats what they changed!

      GET OUT! NOW!

  56. Re:Real Secrets Revealed! by stevejsmith · · Score: 1

    ...News at 11, and 11:30, it seems.

  57. Computer forensics. by index72 · · Score: 0

    I was asked to recover the personal journal and notes of Lewis Bannon, the inventor of butyl rubber. He worked for Exxon Refinery after WWII and was eventually awarded 13 patents. His notes were stored on an ailing 486 with a 120mb hd and running Windows 95. I barely retrieved the info before the whole thing began to disentegrate.

  58. Re:ARGHhhh... D�ja vu! [OT] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since your handle here on /. is G. W. Bush Junior, you shouldn't be able to get deja vu. GWB doesn't have a long enough memory span for deja vu.

  59. There's a lesson here... by Tar-Palantir · · Score: 1

    Before you sell a computer, wipe the damn hard drive! Don't just reformat - do a low-level reformat and have it overwritten with zeros. If you're really worried, use PGP to do it. Then re-install the system and whatever else belongs there.

    If you know somebody who's selling/giving away a computer, make sure they know that the Trash/Recycle Bin doesn't really delete anything.

    1. Re:There's a lesson here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      D'Oh, low level format is a good way to ruin an IDE disk

    2. Re:There's a lesson here... by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      RTFPSTTD - Read The F'n Parent Story To This Duplicate. Or perhaps the link. Summary: the best way to reformat is random 1's and 0's at least 7 times. Just writing 0's once does not make the data unrecoverable.

    3. Re:There's a lesson here... by Tar-Palantir · · Score: 1

      While that is correct, seven passes isn't really necessary in most cases. The only time you'd really need to use that much security is if you've got highly sensitive data (like, say, corporate secrets). Average users almost certainly do not need to go that far. One pass makes it "gone" enough that Norton can't get it back, and that's good enough for me.

  60. MODERATORS by pyr0 · · Score: 1

    Seeing as this story is completely redundant, wouldn't all those posts being moderated as such be *on* topic? :)

  61. Dupe filtering by jensend · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Slashdot ought to implement a dupe filtering system along the lines of the following: People indicate in their prefs whether or not they want to see dups (for the extra discussion). When a dupe is posted and an editor later recognizes it as a dupe, the editor flags it as a dupe and it no longer shows up on the pages of people who have asked not to see dupes.

    1. Re:Dupe filtering by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      This is a sensible idea. Mod parent up.

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    2. Re:Dupe filtering by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Could this include a feature to eliminate "Clueless dupes who post comments to such articles"? ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    3. Re:Dupe filtering by SlightlyMadman · · Score: 1

      In addition, they should install a dupe comment rating system, so I can assign a -5 to any comment bitching about dupes.

      Thank you for at least offering something constructive, though, instead of just saying "Taco can't spell, I mean didn't check to see if it had been posted, already!"

      Also, to play the devil's advocate, I must suggest adding a meta-dupe-comment rating system be installed, so one can also assign -5 to any comment bitching about comments bitching about dupes.

      --

      Money I owe, money-iy-ay
    4. Re:Dupe filtering by Alsee · · Score: 3, Funny

      dupe filtering system

      Oh wonderful (groan). The next day you'd have several thousand baffled people trying to figure out why the hell the front page is completely blank.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Dupe filtering by oh · · Score: 1

      You are already modded up to 5, so I can't mod you higher. I'll just reply and say I think this is a good idea. Please implement!!!!

      --
      Democracy isn't about no one telling you what to do. It's about everyone telling you what to do.
  62. solution to this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always fill up the entire hard disk with files which are filled with 'if you can read this, you are too close'.

    1. Re:solution to this by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 1

      I once used this technique to wipe a disk:

      cat /mnt/mp3/* > /dev/hd1

      With DV editing or tv capture cards, it's even easier.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    2. Re:solution to this by brunson · · Score: 2, Funny

      Fuck you, you no talent assclown! Butterscotch rules! Vanilla sucks! Where did you go to school, SEARS? Anyone who would say that about butterscotch clearly has Oedipal issues, do you kiss you mother with that mouth? Probably, french kiss. French VANILLA, that is!!!!

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      Jesus loves you, I think you suck
  63. Look what my Data Mining turned up by teamhasnoi · · Score: 1
    C:\WINDOWS\MYDOCUME~1\ToRepost
    C:dir

    HDMINING.TXT
    CMDTACO.TXT
    CBYNEAL.TXT
    ASCIPR0N.TXT
    FLEXDISP.TXT
    MSSUXORS.TXT
    SDVERTSE.TXT
    IHATETRL.TXT
    OSXROCKS.TXT
    RPOSTALL.CGI
    SLASH.HTM

    VOLUME SLASDT
    20030023 bytes free 34789287 bytes used

    C:

    1. Re:Look what my Data Mining turned up by gottabeme · · Score: 1

      ...Windows? Is this an obscure form of insult to CmdrTaco?

      --
      "Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
    2. Re:Look what my Data Mining turned up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...Windows? Is this an obscure form of insult to CmdrTaco?

      ;)

  64. hasn't-anyone-heard-of-deja-vu by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    This was posted before here

    [Re: BBC] Sometimes it takes longer for the news to make it to that side of the pond.

    hasn't-anyone-heard-of-deja-vu

    Doesn't Taco actually read his own site anymore? Maybe there's should be a utility for scrubbing embarassing duplicate stories from Slashdot. ;-)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  65. Not reading site == what's you job anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd think editors that don't read their own paper's content would get into some sort of trouble.

    (Too much Diable and The Sims II and LOTR II and thinkgeek buying.) Must be hard to be these guys.

    1. Re:Not reading site == what's you job anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will you people stop calling those who post the stories editors? They clearly do not fit that definition by any stretch of the imagination and it would end the arguments of why they are not doing their jobs. The term you are looking for is janitor.

    2. Re:Not reading site == what's you job anyway? by darien · · Score: 0

      Troll. Your own m-w link gives the primary definition of an editor as "someone who edits, especially as an occupation." And the primary definition of "to edit" is "to prepare (as literary material) for publication or public presentation." So hush.

  66. An easy way to fix the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Since all the hard drive manufacturers that I've dealt with (Seagate, Maxtor, Western Digital, etc.) all make you jump through hoops to find the right utilities for various drives, there's an easy way to do a low-level and fix the problem:

    dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hdX# bs=1k

    Using this with Toms RTBT, you've got a very handy utility floppy.

  67. Data from previous owners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Okay, we've established this article is a dupe. But the original didn't have this juicy morsel:
    "What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"
    Like many /. readers, I am considered the local "computer guy" that fixes the computers when things go wrong. One system I recently worked on was a throw-away by a local hospital. I was stunned and shocked when I went scouring the hundreds of .dbx and .dbf files, only to find that it still had on it medical records!

    Knowing this could cause legal trouble, I quickly got on the phone and called the hospital. They said that they thought the system was clean, and that I should destroy any data on the drive. I then called my lawyer. After a small consulting fee (about $60) he informed me that I shouldn't have anything to worry about, so long as I did as the hospital asked, and destroyed all copies of the records. And I did, and that was the first time I ever felt good about losing data!

    (Posting anonymously, in case any other slashdotters get any funny ideas... :)

    1. Re:Data from previous owners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your such a pussy man.

  68. So how come... by patrixx · · Score: 1

    YOU are posting in this thread? Following your own advice you should be outside breathing fresh air. Tsk tsk ;-)

  69. Re:STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No, read the comments. His sticks out like a sore thumb.

    As an aside, perhaps you ought to look into a new sense of humor. Obviously, his comment was the only one on the page that was actually on topic. Maybe, just maybe, I was calling attention to that fact...

  70. Instead of bitchin' by slackerfilm · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Not to defend the Taco (ok, to defend the Taco) but if you'd read the damn article, you would see that it is a request for your experience.

    Sheesh, you'd think the 'nerds' would pay attention to the details. But then, you are not really nerds. Are you?

    --

    throw the baby out. The bathwater is cold

    1. Re:Instead of bitchin' by whovian · · Score: 1

      If so, then I would like to submit respectfully to Taco that given the track record here with respect to reposts, isn't it reasonable to ask for a warning or disclaimer up-front? At least for a little while?

      --
      To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
    2. Re:Instead of bitchin' by slackerfilm · · Score: 1

      Yeah, They used to do that. I have been kind of wondering why that pracice stopped

      --

      throw the baby out. The bathwater is cold

  71. Re:STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually I know ms.baryon - she's most definitely not a him.

  72. Dejavu ? by CristianoMonteiro · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Did you see a black cat passing twice ? Never mind...

    --
    -------------------------------------------- Se você consegue ler aqui então fala português. Óbvio
  73. MIT by tarzan353 · · Score: 0

    The "From MIT" precursor voids any legal engtanglements. Now it's a class project!

  74. duplicates by damian · · Score: 0, Redundant

    i think its about time that slashdot stories get scoring too, just like the comments. with an option in preferences to ignore scores below a certain level this would make reading slashdot a lot nicer. i guess duplicates would get hidden pretty quick.

  75. Saw 2 HP machines by PotatoHead · · Score: 4, Funny

    in a dumpster.

    A friend went back to claim them, this is what he ended up with:

    2 HP Server class machines PIII 450Mhz good working condition once the cigarette ashes were removed.

    1 DLT Tape backup

    19 New tapes in wrapper and cleaning kit

    Cables and other accessories.

    The machines were used by a financial company. Everything worked and booted up. NT server loaded and ready....

    We shut them down and wiped everything. Pretty scary actually, who knows what was on those machines!

  76. well by tps12 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I bought a hard drive that used to be shared by a bunch of Slashbots. It contained hundreds of variations on a joke about buying CmdrTaco's old hard drive and finding duplicate stories.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
  77. Re:snippet & loink to original SF Gate article by Gudlyf · · Score: 1
    Simson Garfinkel

    Dear lord, that poor bastard must've been subject to so many Simon & Garfunkel jokes.

    --
    Trolls lurk everywhere. Mod them down.
  78. That's easy by Chocolate+Teapot · · Score: 5, Funny
    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?
    Windows '95
    --
    Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise. - William Shakespeare
    1. Re:That's easy by chaddarland · · Score: 1

      Windows ME

      --
      God is dead -- Nietsche

      Nietsche is dead! - God

    2. Re:That's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is a silver medal enough for some people? Jokes been done, buddy.

  79. ./ configuration request: Exclude Duplicates by 1st1 · · Score: 1

    Preferences|Homepage|Exclude Stories from the Homepage|Topics|Duplicate stories = Ticked

    --
    NullPointerException
  80. This story is part of a striped disk array by leek · · Score: 3, Funny

    This story is part of a striped disk array, which is why its content looks similar, but not identical, to the other stripe, which was discovered a week ago.

  81. Re:STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Most definately?

    Got any nekkid pictures?

  82. Humor deprivation experiment gone wrong.... by carlos_benj · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Can we have a secondary designation of Anonymous Twit for those who can't ferret out a clue?

    --

    --

    As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

  83. hey taco, how about reading your own damn site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    geeze another dupe

  84. Re:Offtopic, but more interesting than this thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I second that... some funny shit.

  85. PGP! by Thud457 · · Score: 4, Informative
    PGP (for windows or mac, ie not GPG) has two commands related to this: wipe file and wipe free space. They overwrite the appropriate sectors of the disk with several patterns designed to ensure that no matter what (common) encoding scheme the hard disk uses, every bit will have been set at least once, zeroed at least once, and overwritten with pseudorandom data at least once. If you set in on a lot of passes, it does an even better job. This would be a cheap (free, except for time and bandwidth to download it) way to make sure your sensitive data doesn't get out.

    That said, experts would tell you that the only reliable way to make sure sensitive data doesn't get out is to thermite your drive.

    Also, what's the one-line unix command (running MacOS X here).

    • http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=51331&cid=51 18950
    • http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=50856&cid=50 91657
    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:PGP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Also, what's the one-line unix command (running MacOS X here)

      # dd /dev/urandom /dev/hdc (or whatever)

      For best effect, repeat 3-4 times.

    2. Re:PGP! by Panoramix · · Score: 1
      PGP (for windows or mac, ie not GPG) has two commands related to this: wipe file and wipe free space. [...] Also, what's the one-line unix command (running MacOS X here).

      On Linux, I've always used shred(1). I think is part of fileutils. I guess that for wiping an entire harddrive, you could shred the device. Or run a couple of dd's from urandom.

    3. Re:PGP! by Eil · · Score: 1


      On a GNU system, "man shred".

    4. Re:PGP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are a bad man. A very bad man.

      I take smug satisfaction in the sure knowledge that you will be PUNISHED for that!

    5. Re:PGP! by Door-opening+Fascist · · Score: 2, Informative

      One has to keep in mind that these programs are not designed to work with journaling filesystems. The presence of a journal means that the wiper is not actually certain that the blocks were overwritten.

      If one is giving away a hard drive, it is a good idea to low-level format the drive (if it is SCSI), and/or create a partition spanning the entire disk, dd from /dev/zero on to the disk until it is full, and then use a wiper to delete that file.

    6. Re:PGP! by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 1

      Also, what's the one-line unix command (running MacOS X here).

      shred

  86. Helpful hint to avoid duplicates by JHandey · · Score: 1

    When you use a story written in a foreign paper about a US college...

    It MAY have been reported in a US paper first.

    Ok?

  87. Re:STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real thing right next to me is a lot nicer :)

  88. A couple questions by nochops · · Score: 3, Funny

    1. Are you Tony? How many coffee breaks have you had today?

    2. Got any nice pictures of Julie?

    --
    "A terrorist is someone who has a bomb but doesn't have an air force." -William Blum
  89. ofn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    slashdot has been getting pretty lame lately. this is ofn

  90. Duplicate as Inspiration by RevDobbs · · Score: 1

    Sure, the story is a dupe... but the original one is why I picked up two computers that were sitting on the curb this morning :-D

    1. Re:Duplicate as Inspiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, did you find anything interesting?
      Do tell!

  91. Instead of a dupe... by Eccles · · Score: 1

    How about this story about Congress realizing that patent problems may take away their blackberrys? Who knows, maybe they'll wake up a bit to all that we've been kvetching about for some long...

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  92. Observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know it is a really slow news day when OTHER sites scavenge off /. (here, the Beeb) when usually about half the stories I see posted on /. I have already seen elsewhere.

  93. Not so fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If he didn't read it 4 days ago, then it isn't a dupe.

    And he isn't one of the ones complaining about a dupe. Maybe he followed the thread to see if there were any additional insights from the batch that was submitted 4 days ago.

    Either way, if he doesn't suffer from angst from this particular duplicate, then he doesn't need to be outside breathing fresh air. He didn't say "Go breathe fresh air" upon a dupe, he proposed fresh air to the angst ridden.

    1. Re:Not so fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, he seems to be bitchin to me and as per his own post, he needs to get some fresh air.

  94. Data worth more than the computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's long been know that laptop theives are often more interested in the data than the computer.

    Some computers sold on eBay are sold for the data.

  95. Re:A simple script - done the hard way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is wrong with 'shred /dev/hdaN'?

    In fact, KDE used to have an option on the right-click context menu which would shred a file instead of deleting it. It's not in the version on RH8, presumably because journalling filesystems can sabotage shredding of files. But it still works on partitions.

  96. What a way to learn someone's fetishes by Blue+Lozenge · · Score: 2, Funny
    Some dude was fired from our company a while back.

    When we sorted through his equipment, not only did he have volumes of she-male pr0n, but he had been subscribed to she-male pr0n emailing lists using his company email account.

    It certainly explained his freaky looking "girlfriend".
    :)

  97. A whole slew of games by mao+che+minh · · Score: 1

    I very recently purchased a hard drive off of Ebay for a friend that had at least 12 modern games installed, all with cracks and no-CD patches applied. Jedi Knight 2, Quake 3, Unreal Tournament 2003, Civilization, you name it, this guy had it. We had tons of fun for a while (hell, I imaged the hard drive right away :-) )

    1. Re:A whole slew of games by barc0001 · · Score: 2, Funny

      And not just hard drives. Browsing around the company LAN, we find all sorts of things on peoples's shares. And once a couple of years back, my colleague and I discovered some persons of questionable parentage had gotten into one of our colocated servers and was using it as an FTP site for trading games. Our reaction was like this:

      Me: "Where did all the disk space go?"

      Co-worker: "And this new account?"

      Me: "Damn! I knew we should have replaced this POS(a 2 year old install)! It's been compomised!"

      Co-worker: "Here's where it went. They've got an FTP site up for trading games. It's taking up 30 gigs!"

      Me: "Bastards! .... Is there anything good in there?"

      Co-worker: "Actually.... yes..."

      Me: "OK. Shut that account out, let's prepare to redo the system. And maybe we should archive that. You know, for evidence...."

  98. Strangest thing found by bstadil · · Score: 2, Funny

    The strangest most surreal thing found so far is a copy of the same story on Slashdot.org from a few days ago.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  99. saddams hdd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cat /dev/hdb|grep "weapons of mass distruction"
    #

  100. hey ignorant mods.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    those of you modding this overrated because you don't know why some others find it funny need to a) read the parent post, b) go find a damn dictionary and learn the meaning of two words: tripe, and pun.

  101. strangest thing i've left on a hard drive by tekkitan · · Score: 1

    strangest thing i've left on a hard drive? Windows ME ! :p

  102. Re:Morsals? by blahlemon · · Score: 1
    Morsals from my neighbors trashcan? That's disgusting. My goodness, there are foodbanks all over the place, you don't need to eat...from...

    (goes back and checks spelling)

    Oh, MORALS. Silly Moral...I mean mortal.

    On topic, however, considering what some people do with their neighbors looking in their trashcan wouldn't reveal any surprises. Truth is if you don't want people to know what you've done either a: don't do it or b: don't give it away. Just don't trust anyone else to treat you right.

    --
    It take more faith to believe in evolution than it takes to believe in God
  103. Tomorrow on New Scientist by Longjmp · · Score: 5, Funny

    15:08 21 January 03

    At a worldwide conference held in Atlanta, GA, leading scientists and publishers agreed on a new measurement unit to describe the common phenomenon of news stories getting published repeatedly on internet news sites.

    1 Taco = 3 dpm (dupes per minute)

    After a lengthy discussion we eventually agreed to name the new unit after "CmdrTaco", founder of the famous web site Slashdot. We are really happy now, this has been bothering us since the beginning of the internet. said Sag. S. Nochmal, German publisher and chairman of the convention.

    "CmdrTaco" himself was unavailable for comment. He was last seen yelling "Eternal fame" and "must write automatic re-post script now."

    --
    There are fewer illiterates than people who can't read.
    1. Re:Tomorrow on New Scientist by thlayli · · Score: 1

      C'mon, give this guy a break.. It's not like he has made crimes against humanity like Hitler or anything
      like that..

    2. Re:Tomorrow on New Scientist by gymbrall · · Score: 1

      19:22 21 January 03

      BREAKING NEWS

      There was a thrill of genuine excitement today in the normall dull world of weights and measures as Culbert Pons, the Chair of Recent Units announced a new measurement to describe the common phenomenon of news stories getting published repeatedly on internet news sites.

      1 Taco = 3 dpm (dupes per minute)

      The unit was named after "Cmdr Taco", founder of internet geek news site Slashdot. Mr. Pons is requesting a federal grant to study a phenomenon observed only on Slashdot, where duplicate stories are somehow posted before the original. I refer to individuals with such prescient news power as "pre-dupes" said Culbert. The Philip K. Dick estate was unavailable for comment.

      --

      When I started writing this, it was an homage to the original post. Then I hit the snag of mild inspiration.

  104. Arthur Andersen by Spazmania · · Score: 1

    Lots of good stuff.

    I picked up a half a dozen or so old Pentium computers for dirt at the Arthur Andersen asset auction in DC last year. You know, the guys who audited Enron.

    I figured they'd have removed the drives. Nope! Blanked them? Nope! In several cases, the PCs' former users had left only a few megs free on the 1.2 gig drives.

    Now, I wouldn't know an incriminating document if hit me in the ass. Nevertheless, if my company's books were audited by Arthur Andersen, I'd be pissed off that they didn't clear those drives.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  105. Never mind the drives.... by pbuxton · · Score: 1
    Asking people (as opposed to corporations) to actively wipe their HD's seems ineffective when most people don't even practice safe data, anyway.

    I inherited some PC's at one site I support. One such PC had the previous IT contractor's personal Hotmail folder downloaded to Outlook Express. I had no idea whose mail this was, so I had to look at it (I was about to wipe and reinstall Windows to get rid of IPX/SPX). It was, ah, personal mail... indeed. The contractor... their spouse... a third party.... I wiped it and kept my mouth shut. Don't trashtalk competitors; it's unprofessional. :)

  106. And why on earth.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..do you have pr0n on your laptop if it has bad batteries?.. That kills the entire mobile-pr0n idéa the laptops were built around.. Or do you have a power outlet in your bathroom?..

  107. Secure Harddisk Eraser (boot floppy, GPL) by infolib · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Secure Harddisk Eraser is a Linux floppy that overwrites the HD several times with different patterns. Just boot from the floppy, wait 60 seconds and the harddisk will start to erase.

    The homepage

    Oh yes, I've posted on this before, but that doesn't seem to matter...

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
  108. A DUPE? On SLASHDOT??! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Taco isn't getting his share of the Pink Taco. That explains the dupes.

  109. It's a Karma Pyramid Scheme by raehl · · Score: 1

    Taco posts a dupe, and those that get in early pointing it out get Karma, those that point out the dupes pointing out the dupe get some Karma, and those who point out the dupes pointing out the dupes pointing out the dupes get some karma, but if you get into the pyramid too late, you get screwed with -1 Redundant.

  110. Re:amazing find! by 1nfern0 · · Score: 0

    I once found a slashdot thread that had the same "joke" about dupe storys over and over again. almost as if it were duped. morons

  111. Hard drives left unformated by government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been doing computer work for a unamed computer company that buy old computers from schools, government instatutions etc. and setting them up to resell to the public. One specific batch of computers of about 20-40 computers that came from a federal office i noticed that they had not been formated! i was curious about what all was still on them so i looked and was supprised to find that they had huge databases with peoples Social Security Numbers with the Names, Addresses, and other information that could be dangerous in the wrong hands, and the worst part is that they had no encryption or password protecting them!

  112. How to destroy all that data??? by Richard_Davies · · Score: 1

    My mum recently asked me how they could reliably destroy all the data on a hard disk they are throwing away. I suggested baking it in the oven for a while. Does anyone know what temperature would be good and for how long? Or suggest an alternative that is cheap, easy and 100% effective?

    1. Re:How to destroy all that data??? by karlandtanya · · Score: 1

      See http://slashdot.org/askslashdot/01/02/21/1752256.s html

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
  113. Strangest thing I'v seen on Old HD's by secs · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The strangest thing I have ever come accross on old hard drives, are the original articles of all the dupe posts to slashdot.

  114. Need a new catagory called 'Dupes' by wodelltech · · Score: 1

    no message

    --
    Your monitor is staring at you.
  115. No Kidding by refrain · · Score: 1

    I just thought I'd share a story. When I was a kid (like 15-ish, I guess), I worked at a local computer shop repairing people's PCs... upgrades, installs, that sort of thing. Being concious of the respect one must give to people's privacy, I never really looked into people's Internet caches, data directories, etc., until one day when I, for the purposes of what I was doing, was forced to...

    Now this machine, if I remember correctly, was a "family" PC.. games for the kids, productivity software (I think it was used to run a small business as well), lots of garishly colored Win95 Plus! themes, etc. And there was porn in the cache...

    Strange porn...

    Involving animals...

    And leather...

    And other things I don't care to remember!

    No Joke. *shudder* Who knows how normal I would have turned out if I had never seen that stuff? Being a bit shocked and embarassed, I never mentioned it to the customer... though I probably should have said something...? *shrug*

    --
    "Sic transeunt omnia."
    1. Re:No Kidding by KshGoddess · · Score: 1

      Slightly OT, since it wasn't on a hard drive, but in a user's email account they were "having trouble with"... back in the day, I worked for a mom-n-pop ISP. This was 96, before everyone and their cousin had any clue about what the internet was, how to use it, or that a dial-up connection was not the best way to surf.

      User calls up, "I can't get my mail, Netscape just times out." I ask for the username, do a password lookup, and configure Netscape to get this user's mail. 200+ messages. All porn. I told him the number of messages, and calculated the time it would take to download them all over 28.8 ... yes, Netscape probably would time out, especially since this was POP. I asked him if he ever downloaded and kept the email, he said "No, I wanted to get the email at work and at home." He named the business he worked for and what he did there.

      Now, I don't care what you do at home, in private, with any number of consenting adults, but ... work is where you, um, WORK. And if I were someone who took my computer in for someone else to work on, the last thing I'd want them to have is sticky fingers.

      --
      It's a little wrong to say a tomato is a vegetable. It's a lot wrong to say it's a suspension bridge.
  116. Moderation (On Topic in Thread, read the comment) by The+Darkness · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Maybe I should post this as anonymous to avoid the Offtopic Karma hit. Nah, I'll just hit "No Karma Bonus" and feel the 2 point burn.

    Or maybe the moderators who give "Offtopic" mods need to learn how to read the parent posts and see if the comment is really off topic or not.

    Tangents can and do appear. While they may be "off topic" for the main heading they can be on topic for the context of the thread. For a bunch of people who gripe about context (benchmarks, blame for root exploits, etc) the "Offtopic" mod seems to be used improperly more often than not.

    --
    There are two kinds of people: 1) those that need closure
  117. Smash them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before I dump any disk (HD, CDROM, floppy) I always break 'em up. Actually, if you take HDs apart, you can get a nice shiny ornament. Go on, have a look!

  118. Lots of Lovely Bank data by valisk · · Score: 1

    I bought a bunch of SS20s which once belonged to a major bank, I won't name names so Morgan Stanley don't need to worry that I have tons of data belonging to their customers, which they left incompetantly left on these machines.
    Lucky for this un-named bank that I am an honest kind of guy and llfed the drives without looking.

    --

    Economic Left/Right: -0.62
    Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.69
  119. Software to Wipe a Hard Drive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone have any recomendations for software that will REALLY delete data from a hard drive?

  120. Nuclear Power Plants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    During the 90's I worked for a company that resold off lease computer equipment, and we also stored systems for leasing companies when the leases ended. We received about a thousand PC's from Carolina Power & Light. A couple of their power plants are nuclear, and I found several machines that weren't formatted that still had information regarding parts and maintenance for the plants. The North Koreans would've been tickled to get the info I found.

  121. Re:A simple script - done the hard way! by NTSwerver · · Score: 1

    AFAIK, the only way to completely erase everything from a hard disk is to smash it into little pieces with a hammer. Even after a format data is accessable, if you know how to get it.

    My company does work for the Ministry of Defence in the UK, if we have to swap out a NIC, for example, they won't release the dead card for at least two weeks so that any residual charge dissipates, otherwise information can be gleaned from the chips on the card!

    --
    -----------------------
    Moderator's essentials
  122. Two things leap to mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    First, wasn't there an article in the news a few years back about either SGI or Sun shipping workstations with un-deletable copies of sensitive documents on the HD's? As I remember it, they used whatever files were handy for HD testing, which just happened to be their hardware plan for the next 12 months. Peopl running undelete utilities had a blast looking for those files once news got out. I believe I read about it in InfoWorld.

    Second, I think it's time we consider HD's to be disposable. You buy it, you use it, and then you destroy it. I nail my old drives to trees in nearby woods, with huge spikes driven right through the platters. Very cathartic, and they act as omens to keep system failures away.

  123. Re:Moderation (On Topic in Thread, read the commen by selderrr · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Offtopic" mod seems to be used improperly more often than not.

    very true indeed.
    This whole little subdiscussion is very likely to get moderated as offtopic, whereas the only consistent topic in the entire comments is the fact that it's a dupe, which is offtopic.
    The whole issue basically comes down to wether slashdot is a "discussion site" or an "information site based on comments". If the main purpose of slashdot is to create a vast and useful archive of comments that can enlighten a visitor seraching for info on a "news for nerd" subject, then indeed we are offtopic. If on the other hand, slashdot is a forum in which nerds can discuss anything they consider nerdstuff, almost everything is on topic !

    I suppose the best way is something in between, but right now, I have the impression the balance is shifted way to much towards the first type. Plus, as many of us have said, the biggest problem is the fact that due to the recursive nature of the problem, the problem itself can't be discussed on slashdot.

    And that attitude is what we usually call censorship. Slashdot is more and more becoming a selfcensoring community. I've tried to find analogies in the real world, but fail to see one so far. The only thing I'm sure of, is that it is not a GoodThing(tm)

  124. Most horrible thing I've EVER seen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work as a PC Tech for a mid sized company in the midwest. I started about a year ago, and about 2 months into my new job, we recalled a machine from a guy who had recently left (he had been our inventory buyer). Being the nice person I am, I sifted through the contents of the computer to make sure there weren't any important documents left behind that the future inventory buyer might need. I didn't find anything, but I did a pretty thorough search. This guy was somewhat smart, he had deleted his internet history and cache, but WAIT! The COOKIES! OH LORD THE COOOKIES! He must have been to EVERY GAY KIDDIE PR0N SITE ON THE ENTIRE INTERNET!!! Needless to say, I showed all my buddies what a sick perverted freak we had hired, and proceeded to wipe out the machine. The worst part of all is, I heard a couple weeks later that he had become a priest... for real...

  125. Re:A simple script - done the hard way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    KDE 3.0.x still lists the shred option somewhere.

    In Konqueror, select a file or directory and press [Ctrl] + [Shift] + [Del]. There, you have invoked shred.

    Control Panel : File Browsing : File Manager : Trash

    [in Konqueror] : Settings : Configure Konqueror : File Manager : Trash

    You see 'Ask Confirmation for:/ Move to Trash/ Delete/ Shred'

    You can add it to the right-click menu with by associating the program with all filetypes. If you want, use the wipe wipe program. Some people prefer it over shred. (Neither make use of the nice status bar provided by the [Ctrl] + [Shift] + [Del] combination.)

    Add a file named shred (or wipe) to $KDEDIR/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus/

    $KDEDIR/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus/shred

    [Desktop Entry]
    ServiceTypes=allfiles
    Actions=shred (or wipe)

    [Desktop Action shred (or wipe)]
    Name=Shred File
    Icon=editshred
    Exec=shred -zu %u (or wipe %u)


    From kde-bugs-dist:
    The context menu is meant to contain a few, very frequently used items. It has
    much too much clutter already, and "Shred" was purposely removed. As you noted,
    you can add a service entry if you really want the functionality.

  126. Strangest thing found? by spazoid12 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"

    Couple of days ago I bought a used hard drive and the strangest thing I found on it was a duplicate of this story!


    Slashdot -- for your daily duplicate news

  127. Re:A simple script - done the hard way! by rot26 · · Score: 1

    AFAIK, the only way to completely erase everything from a hard disk is to smash it into little pieces with a hammer. Even after a format data is accessable, if you know how to get it.

    Even after smashing it with a hammer, I wouldn't be surprised if the right people with the right equipment (tunneling scanning electron microscope possibly) could still read it. I recall a few years back some kiddy pr0n guy erased a bunch of his floppy disks with a magnet, then cut them up with scissors, and the FBI still managed to retrieve enough data to prosecute him.

    --



    To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
  128. Why not help solve the duplicate issue?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting
    Hey Slashdot Staff!

    You're Nerds right? You like Nerdy things right? Why not write a simple bit of software to help avoid these duplicate mailings?!

    A simple algorythm (no doubt it can be vastly improved) would be to check any news story being submitted against the previous stories, and look for matches based on a point system. For example, we can see the following similarities in this story and the duplicate:

    date proximity:
    • 5 days
    multi word match (count "-" and " " as whitespace):
    • "MIT grad"
    • "credit-card numbers"
    single word match:
    • hard
    • drives
    • eBay
    • porn
    • MIT
    • grad
    • credit
    • card
    • numbers
    This would represent a *lot* of points. You could then warn the submitter that 1 or more articles looks like a dupe, and get em to check. And Taco could use it too!

    --
    Blue SSL

  129. securing old drives by forkboy · · Score: 1

    Well, here's what we do around these parts with old hard drives....take em up to the range and put a clip of .762 into each one. (or .223, depends on whether the AK or the AR15 is out that day)

    I promise you, you will NOT have to worry about someone getting your data after that.

    --
    This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
    1. Re:securing old drives by digitalhermit · · Score: 1

      Yup. We can't take old equipment to the range (they won't allow non-paper targets) but we can drive about an hour up north to Central Florida and open up a few ports with the Remington 700 in .223 or 22-250. I also have a couple Winchester Model 70s in .270 that are quite effective at remotely securing the drive.

  130. What everyone dreams of by scout.finch · · Score: 1

    On a mac SE/30 from Salvation Army I found intimate IM's between two lesbians.

    mmm.. cinemaxy

  131. Re:Saw 2 HP machines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Pretty scary actually, who knows what was on those machines!"

    I think there are two types of people. One type, whose curiosity would not allow them to do what you did, would not be able to stand not knowing what was there.

    The other type, including you and your friend, seem to be perfectly fine not knowing. Maybe even scared to find out.

  132. Better Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Got to the old story, find the highest rated comments and post them here. Free karma. Yes, I've seen it done before.

  133. Re:Saw 2 HP machines by theguru · · Score: 1

    >who knows what was on those machines!

    Well, nobody does now! You people and your morals. You could have at least lied and told me it was something juicy. :)

  134. Burglary Recovery! by KC7GR · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in the late 90's, when I was still doing PC service work for folks, I had a pretty wild experience in terms of recovery. I ran into this cab driver at CompUSA who was in the process of picking up a whole bunch of power cords and other basic accessories. We got to talking, and he said he was new to computers, and had just gotten a whole bunch of hardware from the local swap meet.

    We talked a while longer, and he ended up agreeing to pay my hourly rate to look the machines over, clean them up, and wipe the drives so he could use 'em. What he had was a full-tower Pentium 166 (big stuff back then), and a smaller external drive that had a security key lock on it.

    So, I vacuum the system's guts (had a ton of dust-bunnies in there), reseat the memory, and fire it up. It boots into Win95. First thing I notice is a TON of very high-end graphics-manipulation and publishing software installed, including packages like Adobe PageMaker, a full version of Acrobat, PhotoShop, etc. There was also the (then) current version of Visual Basic and Visual C (both Enterprise-class editions).

    This set off some alarm bells in my head. The combined software on that system was worth at least as much as the hardware. I started digging a bit deeper. I found a couple of Word documents (yes, the system had a full version of MS Office and MS Exchange on it as well) with the name of a graphics-and-advertising company barely 30 miles away.

    I called said company, and got hold of the admin assistant for the programmer who's name was all over the system. Turns out that the entirety of what that cabbie had delivered to me had all been stolen in a burglary the same day it showed up at the swap meet!

    You can probably guess the rest. The cabbie, once he learned what was going on, and not wanting any trouble with the King County Sheriffs, agreed to just leave the equipment with me in return for anonymity. The system, as it turned out, belonged to one of their senior developer/programmers who, along with their system, had lost about seven years worth of intense work.

    The company involved was so delighted to get everything back intact (yep, every byte of that work was recovered) that they not only paid me for my time involved in cleaning the stuff up, but they also gave me a $50.00 certificate for one of the best restaurants in town. My wife and I had a nice dinner with that one.

    The moral of the story: Pay VERY close attention to what may be left on any hard drive or system you get, and follow your instincts if you're the least bit suspicious! You could end up saving someone a ton of grief and lost hours.

    --

    Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

    Blue Feather Technologies

    1. Re:Burglary Recovery! by TheTick · · Score: 4, Informative

      The system, as it turned out, belonged to one of their senior developer/programmers who, along with their system, had lost about seven years worth of intense work.

      [...]

      The moral of the story: Pay VERY close attention to what may be left on any hard drive[...]You could end up saving someone a ton of grief and lost hours.

      It's an interesting story, I agree, but the real moral ought to be make backups! There's no excuse for losing years of work just because a box was stolen. Some negligent sysadmin should've been canned over that.

      --

      --
      bachiatari na torisetsu o yome!

    2. Re:Burglary Recovery! by mousse-man · · Score: 1

      And that senior developer didn't have a backup of his machine?

    3. Re:Burglary Recovery! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fucking narc... poor cab driver could have had a new computer. you suck.

    4. Re:Burglary Recovery! by pi_rules · · Score: 1

      Some negligent sysadmin should've been canned over that.

      Whoop! It's not the sysadmin's job to make sure you do backups properly -- unless you've got a desktop system constantly conected to the network, and I think the poster clearly stated that the issue at hand was a laptop.

      This is where source control and versioning control comes into play, and yes, it does apply to your graphis people. Every CVS shop I've been employed at, and involved in develpment with, I kept myself on "watch" to see who checked in code. I didn't really care about productivity really, as I knew people were doing their job, I just wanted to see who was making marginal gains and actively checking in good code. I'd track down people and ask them to check even non-working but compilable code at times, when they hadn't made an update in a few days.

      The last shop I was at, which I wasn't a manger in at all, I'd see people with things in Visual Source Safe (there's an oxymoron for you) checked out for 2 weeks without a single update to their major components. That's just not good. I sure as heck don't trust code on my machine to stay put for any given time. I develop on my local box and generally checkin with every minor milestone I complete. Not only does this guarantee safety on my part, but it gives the company a good log of what I have been working on in case somebody else needs to take my place.

      This -does- go for graphics designers too -- source control and versioning control should be a part of your daily routine. Get used to it.

    5. Re:Burglary Recovery! by KC7GR · · Score: 1

      You wrote...

      "Whoop! It's not the sysadmin's job to make sure you do backups properly -- unless you've got a desktop system constantly conected to the network, and I think the poster clearly stated that the issue at hand was a laptop."

      -=-=-=-

      Pardon me for following up on my own post, but... Not so! The system in question was anything but a laptop. It was a full-tower case, with a P166 (current for the time). There was a network card, so it must have been hitched to a LAN, but the developer obviously had no backups -- then!

      I would be very surprised if they didn't start making backups soon after they got their system back.

      --

      Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

      Blue Feather Technologies

  135. Found some really embarassing stuff... by Doug+Merritt · · Score: 3, Funny
    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"

    True story: some years back my wife was doing web design for various clients, one of whom had a graphic artist on staff, who gave her a Mac 100M Zip disk that supposedly had some nice artwork on it for my wife to put on the client's web site.

    But the disk appeared to be completely empty, so my wife gave it to me to try to recover the missing files.

    No problem under Linux...I recovered a full 100 megabytes of files...but they were all kinky porn!!!

    We decided to let the guy off easy and didn't tell his employers what he was doing with company computers and media, but my wife was always a bit leery of working with that guy after that.

    (Yes, I did of course save the more, ah, artistic images for, um, later personal, uh, research. ;-)

    This kind of amusing leftovers on media is probably extremely common, but most people don't have any motivation to pry around into deleted files. As I recall, this particular disk just had a bit of file system damage that made it appear empty at first, rather than literally having deleted files, so file system repair was enough to get all of the originals back.

    --
    Professional Wild-Eyed Visionary
    1. Re:Found some really embarassing stuff... by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      I bought a HD once and ran unformat.. got some porn... and got covered in Junkie virus. Serves me right

    2. Re:Found some really embarassing stuff... by jamesh · · Score: 1

      she was 'a bit leery' about working with someone who had porn like that. and yet she was married to you who had porn like that. funny old world isn't it :)

      kinky: what i do.
      perverted: what you do that i don't

    3. Re:Found some really embarassing stuff... by Doug+Merritt · · Score: 1

      Humor, d00d, it was humor. You don't have to check your sense of humor at the door...oh wait, you're kidding too? Ah, good.

      --
      Professional Wild-Eyed Visionary
    4. Re:Found some really embarassing stuff... by jamesh · · Score: 1

      on the internet, nobody can hear your sarcasm.

  136. It's a dupe by Fr33z0r · · Score: 1

    It's a dupe, and in other news - UFO stands for UNIDENTIFIED flying object. I don't mind duplicate stories, of which we see one or two occasionally, but 300 people posting the same comment in a row... How hypocritical can you get?

  137. She's kinky too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll second that! And so will a quarter of the hetero male /. community. So will 1/8th of the homo male and 7/8 of the female homo /.'ers!

  138. Secrets Revealed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found from an old 120 mb hard drive where Jimmy Hoffer is burried!

  139. ACME by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Time to look for giant magnets on ebay also.

  140. how to elimiate dupe stories.. by cheesyfru · · Score: 1

    Let the users do it. When an admin approves and posts a story, it must first be screened by the community. Anyone with sufficiently positive karma can vote on the pending stories, and if a certain story has enough votes marking it as a dupe, the admins are notified and it isn't posted without a manual override.

    It could be a selection right below the metamoderation - "Review Pending Stories". Assuming it waits for 100 votes before deciding what to do, this would only delay the posting process by a few minutes, and it'd make for a much better Slashdot.

    1. Re:how to elimiate dupe stories.. by addps4cat · · Score: 1

      That is nothing like kuro5hin.org. What a great idea!

      --
      Don't eat shrimp candy, just a heads up.
    2. Re:how to elimiate dupe stories.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      Too much work for them ;)

      If you want to see how it should be done, take a look here (need an account if you want to see how it works, or just read their FAQ etc).

  141. Talk about Second hand by lyoz · · Score: 1

    phew... a friend of mine got a brand new computer, with a zero meter hard disk. And he got loads and loads of data on it. Some coy called Microsoft is selling used disks as new. And ppl tell me they are earning a lot of money too.

    --
    ... hee2 is stuck under the bed.
  142. Can't happen in DoD by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I did some software development for a Department of Defense project, all classified secret. Computer security is taken very seriously on those projects. No connection to the outside world whatsoever, portable media and devices are tightly controlled, and it's a PC roach motel; if you bring your desktop PC in the secured area, it won't come out. There were even strict policies on phone use, especially to the outside world.

    Whenever a PC changed hands, the IT folks did a complete 100% wipe on the hard drive before installing an image, but not before scanning the drive for security violations. I don't know what their disposition policy was, but it's a safe bet that dead media was definitely not going to be recovered.

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    1. Re:Can't happen in DoD by Suicyco · · Score: 1

      I've done work in this regard and what happened to faulty hardware that needed to be replaced was hilarious. So, usually, you ship back dead hardware when you need a new harddrive, etc. These are major accounts so they have quick turnaround on these things, and they had this lengthy procedure for sending out any material like this. For your typical harddrive, they would: wipe the disk with various data dumps, ie. write all 1's, all 0's, random noice, rinse repeat a few thousand times. Then, degauss the harddrive in a huge magnetic enclosure. After that, we start to really wipe data. Open the hard drive, remove the platters. Grind them platters with a sander and dispose of the dust. Then, drill several large holes through the platter. Then melt the thing in an oven so all the plastic is nice and runny and let it cool off. Then ship the whole messy pile back to the manufacturer and ask for a replacement. So, while the pc roach motel is kinda true, hardware DOES leave classified areas at times. Just not in any shape to ever have any data recovered from them. Takes a couple of days to wipe a drive to security's satisfaction.

    2. Re:Can't happen in DoD by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right. A former head of the CIA was busted for copying stuff to his home PC/laptop. Not to mention the Chinese scientist accused of espionage for circumventing rules similarly and exposing nuclear secrets (details -- see Google, but I'm pretty sure). Rules on paper are much dfferent than rules in practice.

  143. Used tape drive secrets. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quite a while ago I bought a 1/2 inch tape drive used with some used tapes from a local trailing edge store. After I set up the drive and put in a tape and found some files and copied them to my hard drive. The tape turned out to be from Intel and some chip testers testing the then new 486 DX266 for lap tops. Several of the files were marked secret or confidential. There was a lot of information about this pin not doing this or that, way over my head. Even some pictures of the intel employees and personal files and pictures of family etc.

  144. Re:Number 8? Number 8? Your order is up by DrewCapu · · Score: 1
    "(never can have enough screws)"
    Although after 8 in any given 24 hour period, I'm usually exhausted.

    Oh, so we're talking about hard disks?
  145. Strangest thing on hard drive by sir99 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What's the strangest thing I've found left on a hard drive? A bunch of twisty little slashdot articles, all alike. In my browser cache, that is (yeah, I know the "Adventure" reference isn't quite right, but I've never played it, so what the hey).

    --
    The ocean parts and the meteors come down
    Laid out in amber, baby.
  146. the sixth hard disk by technoCon · · Score: 1

    i see dead files

  147. Strangest thing... by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 1

    ...a Slashdot reader has LEFT on a hard drive? Oh, that's easy! It would have to be several gigabytes of Young Tentacle Rape Hentai, judging from some of the comments I've read here over the past few months.

  148. IQs droping around here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The average IQ seems to be taking a plunge at /. and its Almost getting to be a waste of time reading replys.

    This IS NOT a repeat of the other story
    THIS ONE ask readers what THEY have found on old drives, not what the MIT gang found.

    Duh.......

  149. Things a Typo Makes Me Visualize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    > Apperantly, the previous owner was your average college drunkard and basically rapped this girl.

    Gimmee a beat, Irwin . . .

    Hey, woman, I'm talkin to you,
    If you don't gimme any lovin', then we're thru!
    So I drink a lot of beer, so I drink a lot of whiskey,
    You got no cause to be cold when I'm feelin' frisky --
    So I'm standing here right outside yo' door,
    And I'll keep poppin' these rhymes at cha, even though I'm a bore.

  150. Speaking of all this data recovery by MATTtheROGUE · · Score: 1

    Speaking of all this data recovery, I began to think. And what did i think of, you might ask. How would I retrieve deleted data? I have absolutly no clue how to. How would YOU suggest?

    1. Re:Speaking of all this data recovery by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      Open the Recycle Bin and start browsing...

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    2. Re:Speaking of all this data recovery by MATTtheROGUE · · Score: 1

      Ok, maybe I didnt make myself clear. In one of the earlier posts they mentioned even after reformating a harddrive it was possible to retrieve the information previously on the disk. What could I use to retrieve that type of information, or file that had been deleted from the recycle bin?

  151. Theory about resubmitted articles by Anonym0us+Cow+Herd · · Score: 1

    Here is my theory about how the same article appears on slashdot multiple times.

    First, the article appears on slashdot. It is very interesting.

    Because the article appears on slashdot, it then appears elsewhere like CNet, CNN, etc. (Please no flames for beginning a sentence with a conjunction.)

    Now that the news item, especially one like this, appears everywhere, now even the BBC, it gets noticed by editors, submitted, and accpeted in an expidited manner, because an editor submits it the second (third, fourth) time.

    However, this is purely speculative on my part.

    --
    The price of freedom is eternal litigation.
  152. Strangest thing.. by krin · · Score: 1

    I'd have to say the strangest thing I ever found was on a 486 someone gave me. There were seemingly endless folders eached named, and together forming a word in a sentence. Jack/and/jill/went/up/a/hill as an example. It was almost like the person was trying to write a book like that, like they didn't know about word processors or something.

    --
    There is no spork.
    1. Re:Strangest thing.. by Carrot007 · · Score: 1

      I once saw a folder heirarchy ike that, had porn right at the end though....

      --
      +----------------- | What is the question!
    2. Re:Strangest thing.. by hhknighter · · Score: 1

      the strangest thing I found was on some study aboard guy's computer. It was running some Chinese/Japanese/Thai version of windows or something. ALL folders and files were in non-English. Upon clicking what I thought was his virus scanner, a cartoon girl popped up and asked for my 'manly' stick.

      I just told him to reinstall English windows or find a translator, cuz basically anything I clicked on resulted in something I rather not see. (I never knew Aladdin did pr0n)

  153. Here's a question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If these guys are MIT graduates, why in the world would they need to buy USED hard drives?? Like they couldn't afford new ones :-)

  154. Funny Cat Scream Impression .avi's by planckscale · · Score: 1
    I found an old PII450 in my old fraternity. I found some funny .avi movies of these guys doing impressions of a Screaming Cat.

    --
    Namaste
  155. Re:A simple script - done the hard way! by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    Floppy disk data is many orders of magnitude less dense than a hard drive, let alone a modern one.

    I mean, 200 GB in three platters these days. That's about 138,888 floppy disks, in about the surface area of 6 floppies. That's 23 thousand times more dense.

    I've never found any accounts on the web of anyone doing magnetic analysis of platter surfaces with modern hard disk, with any amount of equipment, only seen some proposed methods in papers, and even then, they admit it would take weeks to get more than a few kilobytes.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  156. oh for god's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    slashdotters ARE the whiniest, bitchiest group of people I've ever witnessed. jeez. so he posted a story twice. would you rather read dvorak columns all day?

  157. Re:Saw 2 HP machines by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    Hey, maybe it is better not knowing. We imagine all kinds of good stuff, truth is likely to be something a lot more boring...

    I am not sure morals had anything to do with it. It was liability and risk to be sure. We worked in the same building as the other company did.

    Either way, I know somebody very happy right now with two machines and nice DLT backup for nothing but a little work (and smell!)

  158. mainframe disk drives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I worked for a university, we operated an IBM mainframe with 3380 disk drives. These are refrigerator-sized disk drives with 24 inch disk platters. They also tend to crash a lot in the rather non-clean-room environment that we kept them in, so we were constantly cycling in replacement drive platter assemblies.

    We had a service contract with a used equipment dealer, so our replacements would actually be pulls from other datacenters. The disks were invariably formatted as MVS volumes, and contained a variety of interesting things, including source code for various interesting internal applications.

    The most interesting data I ever pulled off of one of those drives was what appeared to be a complete database from a railroad company. I spent about an hour puzzling over the data format, and eventually figured out that I had practically a complete snapshot of the entire operation at the time that the drive was removed. The database listed every boxcar by serial number, the owner of the cargo it was carrying, and where the car was in transit to or where it was stored.

    A couple of years later we switch to a different service company, which wiped the drives before delivering them, thus ending the mainframe data mining fun.

  159. Comerica Banks and your data by inertself · · Score: 1

    I once received a handful of 486 machines from Comerica bank. They were throwing the old out and my uncle told me to grab em before they hit the garbage. Amazingly enough I found out that each one contained customer account information. Since I never intended a life on petty crime I erased the disks, but stuff like that has to make you wonder.

  160. The submission queue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't this indicate a flawed design here at /.? I mean, once a story is take from the submission queue and posted, isn't it then deleted from the queue, or placed in another queue of approved stories that are to be checked by the news poster?

    That, or Taco is just a fucking moron...

  161. stangest thing I've found on a hard drive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows of course.

  162. Safty tips for selling drives. by McFly69 · · Score: 1

    Any drive I sell or put up on an auction, I make sure I do one or all of these things. Any of these will ensure the data can not be retreived from the drive.

    I drop it, on the floor, a few times.
    Open the unit up and pour cement/paint inside.
    Use a paperclip and touch random metal parts together
    Soak it in water for 30 minutes
    Put it in the microwave for 30 seconds
    Put it in water and microwave for 30 seconds
    Play football with it
    Attached it to your car muffler for a day or two
    Take a shower with it
    Take a bath with it
    Give it to a child, for a crib toy, for a week
    Drop it into the shitter while taking a dump!
    Use it as a freezz-bee
    Put it in the mover, for a few hours, at max


    I am sure you can think of more exciting way to ensure data cleaning. If so, please add to this list!!

    --



    NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
  163. The world is't flat!?!? by E1v!$ · · Score: 1

    Dude, when I was 4 I was wondering why the world looked round, when everyone else said it looked flat.

    ACK.

    1. Re:The world is't flat!?!? by wkitchen · · Score: 1
      Dude, when I was 4 I was wondering why the world looked round, when everyone else said it looked flat.
      How thick are your glasses?
  164. It's not with just used hard drives. by PyrotekNX · · Score: 1

    Several years ago i bought a huge box of used floppy disks. They were all supposed to be erased but instead it was tons of software with another blank label on the top of it. Over 90% of the floppies were original diskettes and I ended up with an entire new suite of corel and lotus apps.

  165. Big shots? by E1v!$ · · Score: 1

    A couple years ago my company purchased some computers from a defunct Psych clinic. There were records for a large number of government and business heavyweights in my area. Enough to do some serious damage. (and get in serious sh!znit)

    The drives were low leveled, blasted, etc. Too bad. It would have been good bedtime reading. (morals suck)

  166. Nicest surprise on a "purchased" drive by haggar · · Score: 1

    Actually, I got it for free. The guy thought it had only about 100 MB, while in fact it was a 1 GB+ SCSI drive. The fact was that it had NetWare (3.11 I think) installed, which is installed mostly on a separate, NetWare partition, which this guy didn't apparently notice.

    --
    Sigged!
  167. NEWS ALERT: Slashdot editors have Alzheimer's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just in: Excessive downloading of porn causes short term memory loss.

  168. There was this one time... by apexchin · · Score: 1

    I had a drive come to me, work for about 48 hours (just long enough for me to load all my data on it) and then had a head crash. Of course, I was able to return the drive for a replacement, but not before a buddy of mine at a speaker manufacturing plant demagnitized it for me :) Find something on that, MIT boy! Jeff

  169. at least by _avs_007 · · Score: 2, Funny

    At least it wasn't an article submitted like:

    According to this article posted on slashdot, HP released some.......

    I'd like to see if something like that can slip through the filters :p

  170. NEWS ALERT: Slashdot editors have Alzheimer's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just in: Excessive downloading of porn causes short term memory loss.

  171. Re:Number 8? Number 8? Your order is up by Mike1024 · · Score: 1

    Hey,

    never can have enough screws

    You got that right.

    Michael

    --
    "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
  172. Best thing I ever found? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A copy of Sam and Max.

    Man, that made my day.

  173. Top Secret Project Hard Drives by InfraMan · · Score: 2, Funny

    We didn't bother with wiping the drives.

    After the end of a project or if a drive went bad, the drive platter was physically removed from the hd, smashed and then finally burned!
    ( Ob. M.P. quote : "burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp" )

    Better than what they used to do: destroy the ENTIRE PC too!

    1. Re:Top Secret Project Hard Drives by hhknighter · · Score: 1

      Wow, amazing

      Same thing happened to me, too. I was installing Windows 95 A version on my oldie 486 DX50 a long time ago, and upon completion, it just clinked and destroyed itself.

      I was a kid so I told my dad that windows 95 is electronic version of a paper shredder

  174. Be careful, you don't know what you might find... by Lord+Prox · · Score: 1

    I have one for ya'all...

    I was working at a small local computer shop and one day a machine comes in for service. If I remember the guy wanted a new drive put in because he ever so brilliantly deduced that the old one was not working.

    OK no prob...

    After looking into the old one I saw his stash of pr0n. I was bored, so I rummaged through it...
    Hmmmm he likes teens. OK it looks like poloroids on a flatbed scanner. Young teens.

    sicko...

    The next day he came in to pick up his box, so I carried it out to him and that is when I saw her. I froze, jaw on the ground. I just stood there not knowing what to do... It was his DAUGHTER!

    After he left I notified my boss and stopped looking through "bad" or "old" hard drives for some time.

  175. For those lost souls using Windows XP... by mattACK · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...wiping the free space on a drive is built into the OS.

    cipher /w:[path]

    where [path]= any location on the drive in question.

    This tool doesn't delete files that are present, but simply clears space already marked as "empty". It was included to augment the functionality of EFS. If you encrypt a file, you don't want vestiges of the file from before you encrypted it lingering.

    --


    "My God, this must be a truly remarkable corn chip, to be so widely and confidently touted."
  176. Complete Oracle DB. by MKalus · · Score: 1

    We got a couple of used Sun A1000 Disk Arrays in. When we hooked everything up I looked if I could find any file systems on it, and lo and behold I did. We mounted them and found two complete oracle DBs on it. The DBA was even able to open them up and we were able to look into it.

    I never understand why people don't scrub disks, Sun even has a document on this on their blueprints website.

    M.

    --
    If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
  177. much, much scarier by zyqqh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A roommate of mine once worked at the Berkeley admissions office. Once, he showed up with a stack of ~15 floppies that he said were placed in the trash bin and were completely clean and usable when he tried them. Noticing a cryptic sticker with some numbers and the letters "ETS" on it, I got him to let me take a look at them. Took a raw disk dump. Hmm. Looks like ascii-ish data, as if from a flat database file, unencrypted. And hey, here're names... addresses... social security numbers... and a few more odd 4-digit numbers. about 30 minutes later, having figured out where the fields are, it dawns upon me that i had come upon the ETS test records (SAT I/SAT II) for the '97-'98 incoming applicant class at berkeley (some of the '96-'97 data too). Scarily enough, this also included DOB, SSN, addr, phone number, etc. Apparently the people in charge of processing the data did a quickformat or something and threw the disks right out thinking they're clean.

    The data has since been destroyed for good, but not until after I spent weeks drooling about the hypothetical possibilities that this could've yielded =)

    --
    // zyqqh
  178. I always leave this on old hard drives... by pilot1 · · Score: 1

    This is what I *always* leave on my old hard drives, yes I know the syntax isn't correct, it isn't supposed to be completely correct, it's just supposed to be semi-easy to understand for whoever gets my hard drive. It's a file name PlansForWorldDomination.sh and here's what it contains.. #!/bin/bash # Looking at MY files are you?! # Tsk.. Tsk.. like my plans for world domination # would be plaintext.. # The REAL ones are encrypted. : "check" if intruder > 0 "remove" goto "check" # This moves the intruder who dared to look at my # files to death row.. : "remove" mv -Rf /usr/annoyingintruder /usr/local/deathrow goto "check" # This checks the time, and if it's after or #equal to 12:00 it # removes everyone on death row : "time" TIME=getthetime if TIME > 11:59 goto "nightnight" goto "time" : "nightnight" echo Nice knowing ya.. mv -Rf /usr/local/deathrow/ /dev/null/ goto "check"

    1. Re:I always leave this on old hard drives... by pilot1 · · Score: 1

      Er.. sorry, I forgot to add the HTML.. here is a cleaned up version..

      #!/bin/bash

      # Looking at MY files are you?!
      # Tsk.. Tsk.. like my plans for world domination # would be plaintext..
      # The REAL ones are encrypted.

      : "check"
      if intruder > 0 "remove"
      goto "check

      # This moves the intruder who dared to look at my # files to death row..
      : "remove"
      mv -Rf /usr/annoyingintruder /usr/local/deathrow
      goto "check"

      # This checks the time, and if it's after or #equal to 12:00 it
      # removes everyone on death row
      : "time"
      TIME=getthetime
      if TIME > 11:59 goto "nightnight"
      goto "time"

      : "nightnight"
      echo Nice knowing ya..
      mv -Rf /usr/local/deathrow/ /dev/null/
      goto "check"

  179. Re:Offtopic, but more interesting than this thread by Panoramix · · Score: 1

    Pretty funny, indeed. But...

    Pictures of a web page? C'mon, couldn't they save quite a bit of work, and bandwidth, by just writing their stuff in HTML, instead of photoshopping it? I think it was JWZ who once said something like "the web is full of pictures of text, which is kinda sad."

    And yes, I do realize the irony of this being the first impression I got from their comments.

  180. Just like in office space. by moroderzone · · Score: 1

    My brother works at a marketing research company. They value thier data so much that instead of selling off thier old computers, they physically destroy them.

  181. Re: snooping as an Admin by sakshale · · Score: 1

    Actually, when I am asked to retire a system, it is my job to "snoop through the files" and insure nothing of value is lost, prior to scrubbing the disk drives. So, failure to snoop can also be grounds for dismissal.

    If I was confronted with something equivalent to this, obviously contrived, situation, I would scrub the drives, without comment, and move on. The only time I would report something is if it would impact on the corporation. For example. correspondance related to misuse of corporate IP would be reported immediately.

    Sakshale

    --
    For every problem there is a solution that is simple, obvious and wrong.
  182. I have a serious question by oooga · · Score: 1

    My computer crashed a few weeks ago, with years worth of school work and mp3s on it. In the process of trying to recover it I accidentally... started reformating. Yes, I know, I'm an idiot. It only got to about 2% before I shut it off. Anyway, how do I retrieve the data on the disk? Can I send it somewhere? Can I do it myself? How? How much will it cost?

    --
    -- Nerds on toast in the new millenium
    1. Re:I have a serious question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i have a program called Lost & Found, which recovers lost files, you install it on 3 disks and boot the PC with it and it runs in memory.. You could also put the drive in another pc with an OS and run a hex editor that does sector reading, but you'll be looking at raw data, so it wont be easy to get all the files back, but if you were looking for something specific, like text, it would work.. Try searching google for "data recovery" or "lost files recovery", or "lost & found data recovery" etc.

      I found out about lost & found when i did something real stupid, i was writing a little fake formatting program to scare a friend, and i wanted to simulate disk activity, so i had it open files for writing, and totally forget that erases the contents. I ran the program, it finished, i was so happy it seemed so real, id really scare my friend! Then i got an error trying to load notepad (this was in windows yeah), and then i noticed all the files in root dirs on my drive were 0 bytes... that sucked horribly...but that was many years ago so im not such a dumbass anymore (i hope)

    2. Re:I have a serious question by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      Try testdisk. Free. Recoverd a disk with a gig of downloads for me when Windows trashed the partition table. It takes a long time to analyse a disk, so be patient, then it presents what it thinks the partition table should be, you accept it and it writes it. Obviously, can't run this from the damaged disk itself.

  183. Teach non-techies to wipe their drives by failedlogic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think time has arrived for techices to tell the general public and the companies they work for to wipe their drives before disposing or giving them away. People should be told to encrypt sensitive info and wipe drives. Heck, it should even come w/ the computer manuals IMO with the necessary software.

    I think it just goes to show how much people depend on their computers for too many things. Only a matter of 10 years ago, people had financial information, documents, addresses and contacts and any other personal information under lock and key in a filing cabintet.

    As long as someone doesn't snoop through their garbage bags, someone would probably not want to go to the local garbage dump to get personal information. Now many simply give old, working hard drives to charitable organizations or friends w/o even reformatting them. In the age of identity theft, I think its safe to say that most in the general public shred paper documents before disposal.

  184. Mac II fraud? by whitefox · · Score: 1
    True story: years back, a friend of still in high school was working at Subway when he got into a conversation with some lady. She claimed to be a landlord and offered to sell him some deliquent renter's Mac II for $150 (incl. CPU, 19" monitor, and 9,600 modem). He took her up on the offer and bought it. When the hard drive wouldn't boot up, he asked me to look at it.

    Never having dealt with a Mac before, I did some research and managed to reset the BIOS. Boom, there's the hard drive with some small local publishing company's (think brochures &amp pamphlets) data on it.

    I called him over and he flipped when he saw the contents. As it so happens, he worked a second job at this same publishing company!

    Next day, he goes in tells his boss he's got their computer. She tells him they reported it stolen and got a new one with the insurance compensation - and here's some money to keep it hush-hush.

    To this day, I don't know if the Mac was stolen from the company or not but definitely a weird situation.

  185. old hard disks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just have to say:
    dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hdb,
    or a bulk tape eraser, either way...

  186. Re:A simple script (grr) by Eil · · Score: 1


    On a GNU system, just "shred /dev/hda".

  187. Suggestion by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

    In all seriousness, it would do Slashdot a world of good if "Boobies" was under the topics menu.

  188. Re:Another Duplicate....but not a word about IRC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't we see this story last week? Why do we get dupes about stupid little things like this, but nothing about the disaster on IRC?

    In case no one knows, DALnet is dead. It's been DDoS'ed into oblivion. No servers are working and have not for the past two weeks. They even hit the web servers so dal.net is down.

    Slashdot happily posted a totally inaccurate article about Efnet reaching 100,000 concurrent users, but when a BIGGER network (DALnet) is attacked and driven offline, that doesn't merit so much as a mention?

    Pffft.

  189. Are you kidding? by UnixRevolution · · Score: 1

    Soviet Russia doesn't exist anymore? well then..

    In Soviet Russia, *YOU* cease to exist.

    why? Because the hard drives wipe YOU!!

    --
    You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
  190. Bank account data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everything about the customers of one local bank. I mean everything the bank had got.

  191. good advise! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Mod parent up!

    I wish I had mod points!

    1. Re:good advise! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points!

      um maybe you should try (a) posting actual content (b) with a proper acconut. Mod points and ACs don't mix.

      -- AC

  192. I R #1! @|| 0TH3R5 R #2 or lower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Firstus postus beeeotc..... HUHHHHHH?

    Awww phuck it, I don't know what the hell's going on around here!





    mom says I'm 'l33t!

  193. Comment thief!!! by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

    You, sir, have reposted my comment, without so much as reading it. This should be evident from the bullets beneath it. That was a very naughty thing to do, and I request that you immediately cease and desist.

    --
    I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
    1. Re:Comment thief!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sorry, WB, I wasn't actually seeking out a karma whoring opportunity. I was just illustrating how Taco's incopetence is like handing out free karma.

      Those of you who replied, well, all you can be accused of is being too earnest -- or oblivious. You still had a lot of good information to lend to this stale discussion.

      Those of you who MODDED , shame on you, you've just illustrated my point.

      BTW, I think I am the only person who hasn't timed in with "Taco, you IDIOT, this is a DOOOOOOOOP!". There.

      Anyhow, for anyone who cares about proper attribution, wirelessbuzzers WAS the originator of th comment. LAST TIME THIS STORY WAS POSTED.

    2. Re:Comment thief!!! by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

      No harm. Just cite if you quote someone: as irritated as I am at Taco for handing out free karma, I'm more irritated when people capitalize and take that karma.

      --
      I hereby place the above post in the public domain.
  194. They don't dare whack the dupe. by Dthoma · · Score: 1

    That would mean deleting the story. Slashdot runs on MySQL. When you delete a row from a table in a MySQL database, that row's now empty slot cannot be reused until you do the command "OPTIMIZE TABLE whatever". Unfortunately, the table is locked during this time. So deleting a story would waste DB space which couldn't be regained until (annual?) maintenance.

    In addition to this, you'd also lose all the comments which have been posted with the dupe.

    --

    Note to M1-ers: a curt but otherwise insightful message is not "Flamebait" or "Troll".

    1. Re:They don't dare whack the dupe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, as opposed to wasting the same space by retaining the visible story, in addition to all the comments about something that was already discussed to death five days ago?

    2. Re:They don't dare whack the dupe. by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      That would mean deleting the story.

      No, all you need to do is make it so it doesn't normally display on the front page. Such as changing the date to 1980. Or using users' preferences that build each page to order -- add a "dupe" pref normally set to "don't show", that perverse users can change.

  195. not precisely used HD by chloroquine · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I worked for a professor doing workstudy for about three years who consistantly sexually harassed me - looking down shirt, trying to ask me to spend a weekend in the city with him, etc. One day while doing some word processing I happened upon a file with a few pieces of poetry. One was about the arrogance of american women, and another was about impotence. That almost made up for having to deal with his idiocy for all that time. I debated for a while printing them out and then using the departmental photocopier and posting them all around campus. I should have done that as a going away present to myself.

  196. Re:Offtopic, but more interesting than this thread by xombo · · Score: 1

    I think that this just says it all. I also think boobies should be one of the topics, CmdrTaco's wife wouldn't like that though, and they wouldn't get to make icky geek sex ;P

  197. What are you people hiding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't bother to read the replies to this reposted story. I read all the replies to the first story. What I found really strange about those replies is that everyone acts like they have the working plans to some perpetual motion machine or a lot of kiddie pr0n on their comps. I mean why else is almost everyone who replied so fucking paranoid about what's left on their hard drive? If I ever sell any of my old comps, I'll simply use the wipeinfo utility that comes with norton utilities and that is good enough for me. I just don't have anything that is very valuble or illegal or embarassing on any of my used hard drives.

    What are you guys so paranoid about? Seriously, what is on your comp that is so horrible or valuble that you need to completely destroy your old hard drives because you are afraid of this info getting into some else's hands?

  198. On the menu tonight, ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Leftover hard drives.

  199. Hm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?

    A Slashdot story that only gets posted once?

  200. whoopee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, I thought your average MIT grad would be inclined to make his money the legal way.

  201. Duplication by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1

    That Anonymous Coward story is duplicated a lot too. Must be a troll account for CmdrTaco

  202. Interesting stuff I once found by rongage · · Score: 1

    I used to buy "dead" hard drives from a local retailer. Drives he pulled from systems that were supposedly dead drives.

    Most interesting find: A full copy of AutoCAD 12, with several part prints for automotive components for GM. Hard drive appeared to be pulled from a system belonging to Eaton Automotive. When I got it , it didn't spin up. One quick slam to the desk got it spinning (remember the old Conner 40 meg drives). It wasn't like I was concerned about breaking the drive - it was already "dead" when I got it.

    --
    Ron Gage - Westland, MI
  203. Re:Your sig by The_dev0 · · Score: 1

    Yep. Robert Heinlein. Time Enough For Love, in fact.

    --
    Never fight naked, unless you're in prison...
  204. What I found once by /Idiot\ · · Score: 1

    I picked up a HDD that had a full installed OS running HURD /me ducks

    Well, since this discussion was going no where... at least I didn't mention the lovely Ms. Portman - DOH!

    --
    /dev/Idiot/
  205. [OT] Serious answer to serious question by achurch · · Score: 1

    Anyway, how do I retrieve the data on the disk? Can I send it somewhere?

    Yes, there are a number of companies that specialize in this (google for "data recovery" or the like)--but it's not cheap: data recovery for an entire drive can easily run into the thousands of dollars.

    Can I do it myself? How?

    Yes, if you have the technical knowledge and a lot of time on your hands. You'll essentially be searching for a needle (your data) in a gigantic haystack (the disk), and since files are often scattered across several parts of the disk you may not be able to recover them completely. The actual procedure varies depending on the filesystem type, but in general you have to search the raw disk image for phrases or strings of bytes that were in a particular file you're looking for, and then look before and after that location to see how much of your file is stored there. As searching an entire hard disk takes time, and you have to go through this process (possibly multiple times) for each file, this isn't really practical for recovering more than a few important files.

    One other thing you should investigate is how much of your data you can reconstruct from another source. As always, backups are the number one option, but even if you don't have a full backup of your disk, some of your data might still be saved in other locations. For example, did you save any of your schoolwork on floppy disks to take to school? If so, you can restore that data without having to search the hard disk for it. Did you save any data on the school computers? Might your instructors have copies of your work? Alternatively, how much of the lost data did you actually write, and how much is automatically generated by a program? For example, if you have the source code to a program, you don't need to try and recover the executable as well--you can just recompile it.

    As an anecdote, a bug in a script I wrote recently ended up doing an "rm -rf /" on my server at home. The only backup I had was 10 months old, but since it was a server system, it was fairly simple to just reinstall Linux and restore the few actual data files (logs, etc.) from the backup. In the end, all I ended up losing was 10 months' worth of logs and about half a day's worth of spooled mail.

  206. Retail services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Working at a local retail store that does computer repair it's amazing what you find on people's computers, i.e. white supremacy, home-made porn, etc.

  207. urban legend, rescuing HDs, Lady Luck's a wierdo by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    It's a wonderful story because it grabs the imagination so well, unlike other geek stories we picture the sense of adventure, curiosity, opportunity and pressure of rumaging though some skip for sensitive data. Then there's the element of luck in the stories. Interest in luck makes so many things popular.

    There's no limit to what you _might_ find. You could base a film on it. It's a revelation in Keano Reeves' life when he discovers a letter from the Queen of England to Hitler during the 2nd world war, then realises that governments all over the world are controlled not by people but stratigically planted by aliens in a bid to mine our lives as a model to learn from. Desperate he kills himself. It's a short film.

    Harddrives aren't the best thing to buy 2nd hand of course.

    - rescuing really old HardDrives:

    remember the ones that didn't have pins but rather the type that doesn't break so easily? the ones where the connection was protruding PCB with metal on both sides? same type of connector as 5 & 1/4" floppy drives.

    - how do we identify a filesystem? Partition flags?

    pps Partly Offtopic but a wierd coinsidance of sensitive data:

    - was working at a Junk Mail distro warehouse sending out magasines too. I'd ordered a new computer setup, I forget what. My order was a balls-up and it had been delayed etc; all the usual crap you get every now and then. On one of the many thousands of address labels I stuck onto the envelopes I
    FOUND THE HOME ADDRESS of the managing director for the company I'd ordered it from. Although I didn't act on it in the end what are the chances of that?

    - he lived the otherside of England
    - I knew and actually remembered his name from a circular
    - I rarely look at the labels on those address labels I came to hate
    - I only ordered it a month beforehand

    odd.

  208. Strange Things found on a drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, enough about the dup!

    I grabbed some old macs my company was throwing out (they converted to PCs 5 years earlier). They used a scrap dealer to take the stuff and paid them (per pound). So everything I took save the company $$$. Most of these systems were put there by facilities. The PC IT guys didn't touch them. I'd go through them (I'm a Unix IT guy) grabbing parts - new 3com cards installed a month ago because the previous SMC card died, etc.

    One of the systems belonged to an HR staff person. On it, I found a series of memos detailing to her boss how she had been harrassed by an employee. It also had that employee's reprimand on it.

    Ugh. Naturally, they're all erased now.

    On another note, as the mail admin, I got a bounced email from one guy about "spanking his pink bottom". It was to another guy, not his wife. I had to tell him about the bounce, but I had a hard time not laughing.....

  209. Re:Offtopic, but more interesting than this thread by SirCrashALot · · Score: 1

    Not to be picky.... They are missing a space in "a lot".

  210. Army Surplus Drives by MasterMynd · · Score: 1

    About 10 years ago my boss at the time bought a GRID laptop from an Army auction. Interestingly, there was still the fire control system to an artillery field cannon loaded on the drive. I was surprised as was he.

  211. This was interesting hte first time I read it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now it isn't.

  212. Porn, porn, and more porn by RallyDriver · · Score: 1

    On more than one occasion an outgoing member of our sales force has returned a laptop with pr0n all over it.

    We once received a CD-ROM of artwork from a client where they accidentally included some nasty hardcore stuff involving farm animals (bonus points - it was sent to a female staff member at our company).

    The best one however was from an IT guy at a place I used to work - the company bought IBM laptops in large batches, and the IT guys would provide preconfigured Windows NT4 network install images (using Norton Ghost or similar) for each model (I dual booted and mostly used Red Hat, but the corporate email and expense reporting system was Lotus Domino R4, and the applet client sucked big time :-)

    One hapless IT chap released a Norton image where he'd been testing the browser using various, ahem, websites, complete with all the cookies to prove it stored under his NT domain login in WinNT/Profiles/r****

    Luckily for him it was a laid back place, and no-one lost any sleep over it.

    1. Re:Porn, porn, and more porn by tbj61898 · · Score: 1

      Hey :)
      Actually the worst thing about p0rn happened to me is:

      a friend ask to me to configure some internet program, mostly to enable webcam for live chat.

      Well, as soon as I started the application provided with webcam, just to test if he was able to insert the provided CD and click next I agree next next OK YES Finish. Well, what's the worst thing one can take a shot of himself? no, it's not the face.

      Strange, as soon as I get this pics-populated-screen I took my hand off the keyboard, ask yourself why.

      Ugly.

      --
      nop, nop, nop #VBLANK
  213. From the hasn't-anyone-heard-of-search-dept by dszd0g · · Score: 1

    Come on Taco. I love the site, but is searching previous articles before submitting really that hard?

    Lately, we should rename him CmdrDuplicate.

    --
    This message is encrypted with Quad ROT-13 to protect the author's copyright under the DMCA.
  214. Parking ticket records by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bought a very old laptop at a city auction, turned it on and found that it had been used by the police to record parking violations, had the car tag number, the owner's name, driver's lic number, street address and date of birth for each violation! Just happy I never had a parking violation in that town!

  215. Good stuff - if I can access it by irish_spic · · Score: 1

    I have a bunch of IBM Travelstar drives (for laptops) with potentially a lot good stuff in them; the problem is that most are locked with a hd user password (not a POP or a supervisor pwd). How could I retrieve the password or hack the locked drives?

    cheers,
    Frank

    p.s. you can email info to elfmaloney@yahoo.NOT.ca
    (w/o the negative word)

    --
    A truth that's told with bad intent, Beats all the lies you can invent. -- William Blake
  216. You paid $60 bucks for that legal advice? by serutan · · Score: 1

    I agree with your lawyer that you have no problem, and everything is ok.
    That'll be $85 (my rates are higher).

  217. Re:Saw 2 HP machines by n1ywb · · Score: 1

    Heh. One time I found a laptop in a garbage can at the South Street Seaport in NYC. It was a 486 DX2-50 with 16 megs of ram, VGA active matrix LCD, and onboard SCSI of all things. All in all a nice machine once I wiped off the mustard. Until I found out that the hard drive was riddled with bad blocks and scandisk found more every time I ran it. And of course it's a SCSI disk so $$ to replace. I guess that's why it was in the garbage can.

    Oh but what data I DID check out on the hard drive revealed that it had belonged to one of the tour boat companies at the seaport there.

    --
    -73, de n1ywb
    www.n1ywb.com
  218. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 0

    vi is [[13~^[[15~^[[15~^[[19~^[[18~^ a
    muk[^[[29~^[[34~^[[26~^[[32~^ch better editor than this emacs. I know
    I^[[14~'ll get flamed for this but the truth has to be
    said. ^[[D^[[D^[[D^[[D ^[[D^[^[[D^[[D^[[B^
    exit ^X^C quit :x :wq dang it :w:w:w :x ^C^C^Z^D
    -- Jesper Lauridsen from alt.religion.emacs

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...