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New Toshiba Drives Wipe Data When Turned Off

CWmike writes "Toshiba on Tuesday introduced a new hard drive feature that can wipe out data after the storage devices are powered down. The Wipe feature in Toshiba's SED (Self-Encrypting Drives) will allow for deletion of secure data prior to disposing or re-purposing hard drives, Toshiba said. The technology invalidates a hard-drive security key when a system's power supply is turned off. The new Wipe capability will go into future versions of the SED drives, for which no timeframe was given. Beyond use in PCs, Toshiba wants to put this feature on storage devices in copiers and printers."

3 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I find this hard to believe by txoof · · Score: 4, Informative

    This has been covered to death here on slashdot, but basically one pass of /dev/random will pretty much take care of wiping a drive. Drive recovery companies will tell you that the hypothetical bit-by-bit recovery is possible, but is so ungodly costly that it's not worth doing unless there's something REALLY important on the drive (like pictures of your mom). If you're really paranoid, don't waste your time with shred, just dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/hda twice and call it a day. Shred takes F O R E V E R and really provides nothing more than a nifty status bar. If you're SUPER paranoid, dd the drive twice and yank the platters, play frisbee, build a tesla turbine or simply scratch the hell out of them and chuck them in the recycle bin.

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    This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
  2. Re:I find this hard to believe by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Informative

    >Wiping a 500gb drive takes several hours at least.

    Not really. The problem is that everyone picks some zany wiping scheme. Those Gutmann patterns don't even make sense with any modern drive. All you really need to do is zero the drive once. It doesn't take that long. I have yet to see a recovery from a drive that's been zero'd out. Anything past one pass of zeros is just extra credit.

  3. Re:Information, please. by txoof · · Score: 4, Informative

    All the articles are pretty poorly written, and the Computer World article misquotes the Toshiba press release

    Computer World

    Drives with the technology will go into hard drives for laptops and desktops.

    Toshiba

    But lost or stolen notebooks are not the only security risk that IT departments must address. Today, most office copier and printing systems utilize HDD capacity and performance to deliver a highly productive document imaging environment. Many organizations are now realizing the critical importance of maintaining the security of document image data stored within copier and printer systems.

    Toshiba is selling these drives as a method for securing scanning copiers. Many of the current copiers hold onto everything that is copied or scanned indefinitely leaving a gaping security hole. The new SED drives encrypt their contents and then wipe the key when the drive powers down leaving the data intact, but no meaningful method for recovering it. If a thief tries to yank a SED drive out of a copier, it automagically wipes it. If part of your security procedure is to shut down the copiers each night, your daily load of potentially secure documents and copies of Bob's butt are also automagically wiped.

    Clearly, this type of technology would be worthless in a notebook or any other type of PC. You'd always be running from outlet to outlet to save your data. It'd be an IT version of that terrible Jason Statham movie Crank 2: High Voltage. Shudder.

    --
    This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes