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| Re: Wiping a drive Personally, I'd recommend that if it worries you enough to wipe the drive, you should remove and physically destroy the drive. Even "wiped" drives can have data recovered from them, if anyone cares enough to spend the time and money to do it. -- Richard G. Harper [MVP Shell/User] [email]rgharper******.com[/email] * NEW! Catch my blog ... [url]http://msmvps.com/blogs/rgharper/[/url] * PLEASE post all messages and replies in the newsgroups * The Website - [url]http://rgharper.mvps.org/[/url] * HELP us help YOU ... [url]http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm[/url] "Wonderman" <nospamidainc@cox.net> wrote in message news:uGTHdBGDIHA.5208@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...[color=blue] > Can anyone comment on whether the software from a drive mfgr. that writes > zeros to the drive is sufficient and secure when transfering the drive ? > TIA.[/color] |
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| Re: Wiping a drive I just want to make it really hard and expensive for the casual pair of prying eyes to take a look. Thank you both. "sosrandom" <sosrandom.2ybkp6@no-mx.forums.net> wrote in message news:sosrandom.2ybkp6@no-mx.forums.net...[color=blue] > > -Some machines can recover data that's been written over only one or two > times, however. That's where secure delete standards, such as the > Department of Defense 5220.22-M, come in. According to this > specification, overwriting the drive sectors three times with specific, > different characters constitutes one pass. Many experts recommend seven > such passes to render the data completely unrecoverable. But reading > data that has been overwritten by even the simplest shredders requires > expensive hardware, so unless you're worried about professional sleuths, > such thorough overwriting probably isn't necessary.- > > > -- > sosrandom[/color] |
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| Re: Wiping a drive If every bit on the drive has been written to zero's! How is any data recoverable? Please explain to me. Maybe I missed something. "Wonderman" <nospamidainc@cox.net> wrote in message news:uGTHdBGDIHA.5208@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...[color=blue] > Can anyone comment on whether the software from a drive mfgr. that writes > zeros to the drive is sufficient and secure when transfering the drive ? > TIA.[/color] |
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| Re: Wiping a drive While it may be possible to get smidgeons of data enough perhaps to nail a member of the criminal element, the chances of resurrecting enough to be of use is marginal at best unless one pays $$$ to get it done. People 'flighty of thought' seem to imagine that it is possible to get a complete system up and running again. Running zeros a few times will prevent most from ever recovering anything meaningful. "jrb1164" <jimburmeister@msn.com> wrote in message news:59620E54-16E6-495E-8394-4464D3F07259@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > > If every bit on the drive has been written to zero's! How is any data > recoverable? > Please explain to me. Maybe I missed something. > > > "Wonderman" <nospamidainc@cox.net> wrote in message > news:uGTHdBGDIHA.5208@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...[color=green] >> Can anyone comment on whether the software from a drive mfgr. that writes >> zeros to the drive is sufficient and secure when transfering the drive ? >> TIA.[/color] > >[/color] |
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| Re: Wiping a drive Google the subject and you'll find out how. The FBI does it every day. -- Richard G. Harper [MVP Shell/User] [email]rgharper******.com[/email] * NEW! Catch my blog ... [url]http://msmvps.com/blogs/rgharper/[/url] * PLEASE post all messages and replies in the newsgroups * The Website - [url]http://rgharper.mvps.org/[/url] * HELP us help YOU ... [url]http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm[/url] "jrb1164" <jimburmeister@msn.com> wrote in message news:59620E54-16E6-495E-8394-4464D3F07259@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > > If every bit on the drive has been written to zero's! How is any data > recoverable? > Please explain to me. Maybe I missed something. > > > "Wonderman" <nospamidainc@cox.net> wrote in message > news:uGTHdBGDIHA.5208@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...[color=green] >> Can anyone comment on whether the software from a drive mfgr. that writes >> zeros to the drive is sufficient and secure when transfering the drive ? >> TIA.[/color] > >[/color] |
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| Re: Wiping a drive Try dban disk wipe. "DBAN is a means of ensuring due diligence in computer recycling, a way of preventing identity theft if you want to sell a computer,..." [url]http://dban.sourceforge.net/[/url] "Wonderman" wrote: [color=blue] > I just want to make it really hard and expensive for the casual pair of > prying eyes to take a look. Thank you both. > > > "sosrandom" <sosrandom.2ybkp6@no-mx.forums.net> wrote in message > news:sosrandom.2ybkp6@no-mx.forums.net...[color=green] > > > > -Some machines can recover data that's been written over only one or two > > times, however. That's where secure delete standards, such as the > > Department of Defense 5220.22-M, come in. According to this > > specification, overwriting the drive sectors three times with specific, > > different characters constitutes one pass. Many experts recommend seven > > such passes to render the data completely unrecoverable. But reading > > data that has been overwritten by even the simplest shredders requires > > expensive hardware, so unless you're worried about professional sleuths, > > such thorough overwriting probably isn't necessary.- > > > > > > -- > > sosrandom[/color] > >[/color] |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| i need help wiping my hard drive | Jusin | Windows XP | 8 | 04-10-2007 06:45 PM |
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| Wiping files that have already been Deleted | Mike | Windows XP | 11 | 03-28-2007 06:45 PM |
| Wiping the OEM drive and installing Vista Ultimate | helpherb | Windows Vista | 3 | 02-03-2007 05:30 AM |
| Wiping Out and Starting Over | Koebbe14 | Tablet PC - Getting Started | 0 | 12-10-2006 08:24 AM |
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