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The art of wrecking an hard disk drive.
Any creative ideas on how to wreck / secure clean an hard disk drive before disposal?
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/disk_drive? shred -n whatever -z /dev/disk_drive? Magnet? (false sense of security) Fire? Hammer? Acid? Post your thoughts. |
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-- since you do not have a protocol established for disk 'elimination' find a company in the same business as yours and determine what they deem is appropriate. For example, we are bound under US federal law: Oxley-Sarbanes - so called SOX. We use a company that literally shreds disks. It may be overkill, but apparently our auditors don't think so.
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some companies have a nice square concrete box in the smoking lot, and they add a new layer of concrete with the hdd inside
you could also, open the disc, and use some kind of powertool or you could put that hd in another box, and run dd over and over again for some time, make it random, no always 0 over 0 you can recover hdd info from a hd if it was deleted once, or twice. i have read about recoverng info after eleven passes., but im sure that if they are capable of using that tech, they could easily bribe another employe for the same info. so just use dd a few times, and one or two hits with a hammer. hammers always fix things as a side note, do you know the guy from "will it blend?" ? |
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Take it apart. You will get a few jumpers, quite a few screws, and some really cool and powerful magnets. If rubbing those magnets on the platters doesn't assure you, scratch the platters up or bend them.
Careful though, these are powerful magnets! This is actually my only source for jumpers. Not sure where else to get them... |
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Some people think the extreme methods are overkill, but be careful. Data recovery services are capable of pretty amazing things. Beyond the typical melted in a fire/accidentally demagnetized/encrypted and forgot password stuff they can recover data from some really weirdly damaged disks.
I found an email I remembered forwarding to some friends a year ago from a cnet news.com article on the strangest jobs Kroll Ontrack had this past year. In all these cases they recovered the data. • In the middle of an argument, a businessman threw a USB stick at his partner, with the device ending up in several pieces on the floor. Unfortunately it contained valuable company plans. • A scientist was fed up with his hard drive squeaking, so he drilled a hole through the casing and poured in oil, stopping both the squeaking and the hard drive. • To test the functionality of a parachute, a camera was dropped from a plane. The parachute failed and the camera shattered into several pieces, but the device's memory stick was reassembled and the footage was recovered. • After discovering ants had taken up residence in his external hard drive, a photographer took the cover off and sprayed the interior with insect repellent. The ants were killed off and the data was eventually recovered. |
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