Memories of a Media Card
twistedmoney99 writes "Anyone who has upgraded their digital camera probably has a few older, incompatible media cards lying around — so why not post them on Ebay? Well, if you do, be sure to properly wipe them because the digital voyeurs are watching. Seth Fogie at InformIT.com purchased a bunch of used cards from Ebay and found recoverable data on most of them. Using the freely available PhotoRec application, he was able to extract pictures, movies, and more from apparently formatted cards. The picture is clear — wipe anything that can store digital data before getting rid of it."
Memory cards do not have nearly as strong of a memory effect as hard drives. With a hard drive you can write and rewrite multiple times and still have data recovered by someone willing to spend the time, effort, and money. But memory cards are much harder. You could be relatively sure of safety if you just:
1. Delete everything on the card.
2. Fill the card with something not private (maybe a text file that just repeats the same character).
3. Delete everything on the card.
4. If you're paranoid do 2 and 3 again.
If you don't have a computer handy, you can accomplish step 2 by taking photos of a blank sheet of paper or a lenscap or something of that sort.
Better (and more convenient) than dd'ing from /dev/urandom is wipe(1). It will, at your option, overwrite the disk using 34 different byte patterns, 8 of which are random.
Its man page is also the only one I know of that uses the phrases "rising totalitarianism", "Department of Homeland Security", and "THIS IS AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS THING TO DO".
(Just kidding!) <sigh>
He'd need a zoom lens if he were very tall - or if otherwise his dick or parts of it were very distant from the camera.
If it were small, he'd want a macro lens.
---GEC
I'm but the humble pupil, seeking to snatch the scratchbuilt pebble from the master's fully articulated hand
In a nutshell, for hard drives, "If commercially-available SPM's are considered too expensive, it is possible to build a reasonably capable SPM for about US$1400, using a PC as a controller". So it is in the reach of the hobbyist to recover up to around the last 20 items recorded on any magnetic media (easier for floppies, harder as drives become denser). On solid state memory, I believe an electron microscope is needed for analysis. Still, data that has been in one location in RAM for more than five minutes is in theory recoverable.