A perfect example of stupidity

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ShawnD1

Lifer
May 24, 2003
15,987
2
81
Because if you notify them in a very memorable way, they won't make that mistake again. While I agree that a simple, "Hey, just wanted to know that I picked up a discarded external HDD for repair and it turns out that it's full of your personal data, including SSN and banking details" along with a link to a good system-wiping software (like DBAN) would be a bit more "polite," I can completely see the argument in favor of "shocking" the person into better security habits.

ZV
No good deed goes unpunished. If you send a shocking email, he'll track you down and have the police arrest you for identity theft. It's really in your own best interest to not send him anything.
 

Zenmervolt

Elite member
Oct 22, 2000
24,514
41
91
No good deed goes unpunished. If you send a shocking email, he'll track you down and have the police arrest you for identity theft. It's really in your own best interest to not send him anything.

If you send the E-mail I described, he can't have you arrested for anything, especially if you mention that you've wiped the drive.

Hell, even if you send the fully shocking E-mail, it's still not identity theft since the identity theft statutes all require criminal intent. An E-mail letting the person know that their information is out there is slam-dunk evidence that there's no such intent.

ZV
 

ShawnD1

Lifer
May 24, 2003
15,987
2
81
If you send the E-mail I described, he can't have you arrested for anything, especially if you mention that you've wiped the drive.
Yeah but then he's forced to wipe the drive.

He should totally upload all of the pics to some site.
 

Squisher

Lifer
Aug 17, 2000
21,204
66
91
I am getting rid of two old computers this weekend, but the hard drives will be destroyed before being taken to the recyclers. There are just too many good data recovery programs out there and neither of these computers currently will boot, so it makes it tough to use DBAN or another truly secure formatting tool.

It is amazing how often it does happen that data is simply left lying around on old storage devices.

I took three computers to Salvation Army last weekend. The hard drives got the disabled by my sledge hammer.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
19
81
Maybe his mother threw it out without asking him. Happened to me when I went away to college (fortunately it was just a monitor and not a hard drive, but I have no doubt she wouldn't have erased anything if she had simply pitched all my computer parts).
I'm glad my mom listens to me about computer stuff. :)
At one point, she was concerned about donating an old computer to Goodwill because of snippets of information she got from me over the years about data security. I's so proud. :D

Yeah it's not 100% foolproof, but DBAN is a pretty safe bet. :)

But wow, at the very least, still qualifying as negligent, do a quick format. It'll at least look empty.

And as far as my home PC goes, I run RAID 5, and any sensitive data is encrypted. One drive wouldn't be of much use, and even having all of them would likely require having the proper controller available.


No good deed goes unpunished. If you send a shocking email, he'll track you down and have the police arrest you for identity theft. It's really in your own best interest to not send him anything.
"And if you try to backtrace this and report me to the cyberpolice, and they show up and forcibly remove me from my house, software running a timer-dependent deadman switch on a remote server will activate, and post a link to a ZIP file of your "private" pictures to 4chan's /b/ section. Have a nice day!"
 
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ch33zw1z

Lifer
Nov 4, 2004
39,620
20,213
146
Honestly, I don't see any necessity for them to be able to do that. Give me someone who understands the big picture and doesn't know how to hold a screwdriver rather than a hardware pro who doesn't understand architecture or data structures.

Yea, hopefully they have enough money to hire someone to fix the machines running their precious apps. Book smart, no sense. F that.
 

skyking

Lifer
Nov 21, 2001
22,711
5,839
146
I have a drill press and collection of bits for this purpose. Once I can't use them, nobody else can either :D
 

Exterous

Super Moderator
Jun 20, 2006
20,565
3,752
126
People are dumb. People also do not realize once something is deleted doesn't mean it's gone...

It is staggering how little care people show towards their personal information once its on a computer - right down to the cleaverly named 'passwords.doc' file.

I shudder to think to think about all that information flaoting around out there because of stupid/poor information security practices
 

Born2bwire

Diamond Member
Oct 28, 2005
9,840
6
71
BTW-I have some IDE hard drives lying around my house that are probably well over a decade old. I'd never throw those out. Wanton desctruction for the lot of them!

This is my problem. I have a few IDE hard drives stowed away but I did not erase them before storing them. Now, I don't have an IDE interface handy anymore to get on and erase them if I wanted.
 

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2001
5,994
496
126
LOL! Funny to see how this thread was resurrected...

@Dennilfloss: same-old, same-old.

Sorry folks, no more pics... Trust me, you wouldn't have wanted to see them, anyway.
Naked fat (and hairy) people, or fat (and hairy) people having sex = disturbing. I can't imagine anyone thinking that snapping such images is a good idea, because the rewatchability factor is ten to the minus one thousand. My eyes still sting from all the Lysol... :D

In the end, I'm glad that I got a free HDD enclosure and a good lesson in privacy; being able to pass that lesson around and getting a funny story out of it was an added bonus. And many of your comments were priceless. Thanks for playing!

Oh, by the way - did you guys know that the newest version of the freeware CrapCleaner does a pretty thorough job of erasing/deleting/formatting hard disk drives, up to (and including) NSA specifications?