- Mar 28, 2003
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I need a utility like Acronis Drivecleanser that will destroy all the data on the hard drive. The problem is that the software is currently giving me some problems and I'm wondering are there other utilities like that? Thx
The DOD standard disk wipe is adequate to erase and then overwrite all data with a random bit pattern beyond the ability of all current methods to extact any sort of useful data from the disk.Originally posted by: calpha
All i know is my uncle who worked with the FBI said they had some next-level sh!t for data recovery. He's a bit of a computer head, and he implied that writing zero's to a disk from sector 0 to end is simply not enough to avert their software from seeing what was there before. Too bad I don't understand HD's more
Send a note to Steve @ the grc.com. I bet he knows a way to do it![]()
Send a note to Steve @ the grc.com. I bet he knows a way to do it
Originally posted by: tcsenter
The DOD standard disk wipe is adequate to erase and then overwrite all data with a random bit pattern beyond the ability of all current methods to extact any sort of useful data from the disk.Originally posted by: calpha
All i know is my uncle who worked with the FBI said they had some next-level sh!t for data recovery. He's a bit of a computer head, and he implied that writing zero's to a disk from sector 0 to end is simply not enough to avert their software from seeing what was there before. Too bad I don't understand HD's more
Send a note to Steve @ the grc.com. I bet he knows a way to do it![]()
The government does not physically destroy the hard disk platters 'in case' the software is not adequate to do the job, but rather 'in case' the drive somehow slips through without having the software wipe procedure performed, or performed properly, in the first place. The government physically destroys the disks to eliminate the potential for human inadequacies, not software inadequacies.
Norton's Wipe Info has a DOD spec wipe.
Actually that's somewhat of a bad example also as wiping even small bits of data off a RAID array is very difficult. So at best, we could have hoped to wipe the whole disk, but would still lose the data. But it's the excample that's been pissing me off the most lately.Originally posted by: ergeorge
Originally posted by: tcsenter
The DOD standard disk wipe is adequate to erase and then overwrite all data with a random bit pattern beyond the ability of all current methods to extact any sort of useful data from the disk.Originally posted by: calpha
All i know is my uncle who worked with the FBI said they had some next-level sh!t for data recovery. He's a bit of a computer head, and he implied that writing zero's to a disk from sector 0 to end is simply not enough to avert their software from seeing what was there before. Too bad I don't understand HD's more
Send a note to Steve @ the grc.com. I bet he knows a way to do it![]()
The government does not physically destroy the hard disk platters 'in case' the software is not adequate to do the job, but rather 'in case' the drive somehow slips through without having the software wipe procedure performed, or performed properly, in the first place. The government physically destroys the disks to eliminate the potential for human inadequacies, not software inadequacies.
Norton's Wipe Info has a DOD spec wipe.
To some degree it's irrelevant whether the "wipe" methods are technically inadequate or practically inadequate. For some programs at least, the policy is that disk wiping by any method is never an accepted way to destroy the data. My previous example isn't really a good one ... those drives were obsolete anyway and weren't worth the time and effort to wipe. But I've seen some other cases that would really piss you off (0.8TB 15K SCSI RAID array trashed due to a < 10Kb judgement error ... and the cost of the disks is trivial WRT the data and work lost)