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Data Still Left on Storage Devices for Sale

cluedweasel writes "According to a BBC story many people are still putting up their old PC's and storage devices for sale without taking basic precautions to ensure that confidential data is erased. The suggestion at the end of the story is to get a professional forensics firm to wipe your data or just destroy the item in question. With the low price of storage devices, the latter is probably preferable."

4 of 403 comments (clear)

  1. Not only good drive but also bad drives by slashnutt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I always hate having to send in my hard drive for warranty repair. Years ago, I watched a friend recover information from a newly arrived warranty repaired drive. If the drive is dead and has to be sent into for warranty service, make sure one of those super powerful magnets from another drives is put around all over the hard drive case. Don't, know if that will wipe anything but I don't expect the manufacturer to ensure my data is secure.

    That said I used eraser every night.

    1. Re:Not only good drive but also bad drives by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unfortunately a few passes with random data is not as effective against a sophisticated recovery effort as is often assumed.
          Now if it's just some random joe with an undelete program he got for $19.99 at the local shop then a single pass is often enough, more sophisticated software only tools might get past a few, but with hardware equipment (probably not used often below the fbi/ pro foresnics places) you might want to do something a bit more secure.
          With good knowledge of how the data is actually stored on the disk you can figure out patterns that tend to degausse the bits being wiped and help eleminate the residual images left by the micro imperfection in head positioning (which are shrinking to almost nothing these days) and simular effects a trully sophisticated data recovery effort might use.
            Peter Gutman put out a paper about this that can be read at http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/secure_ del.html
      that explains it better.
          Though with remapping and newer recording techniques things change and software only erasure becomes more and more problematic. At the highest levels of secrecy I believe most governments require over-kill levels of outright hardware destruction.

      Mycroft

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  2. With Threads Like These... by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Invariably in discussions regarding data found on used hard drives there are a litany of stories about what people have found on drives they have bought. In almost every single instance of this there's a disclaimer at the end lines of, "but I deleted it of course." I wonder how many of them actually did. And, of those, if they deleted only the data, or the data and the programs?

    I should also point out that I don't doubt any individual's account- I just don't know that I trust the whole population. Just a thought...

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  3. Re:USB keys by pe1chl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But does that destroy the data? Did you check that on anohter key?