Selling Laptop & Erasing Data

quakeworld

Senior member
Aug 5, 2009
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Hi. I have an HP dv9815nr which comes with a system recovery/restore partition. I'm selling it and used the system recovery to re-image the drive. This restored the laptop to its original, default condition (software wise).

Is this enough to make sure that all my data is wiped out?

OS: Vista sp2 (back to sp1 after restore).

thanks.
 

corkyg

Elite Member | Peripherals
Super Moderator
Mar 4, 2000
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Probably close enough unless you are dealing with the KGB. You can always do a DoD wipe, but takes a couple of hours on average.
 

TheStu

Moderator<br>Mobile Devices & Gadgets
Moderator
Sep 15, 2004
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Probably close enough unless you are dealing with the KGB. You can always do a DoD wipe, but takes a couple of hours on average.

The only way to be sure is to do a DoD spec 35 pass zeroing.

Then, remove the platters from the drive and place them each into individual burlap sacks.

Beat them methodically with medium-large rocks for 6 hours each until you have something about the consistency of sand.

Bury each sack in a different state.

Your data is secure.

If that is too much work, then what Corky said is right on the ball.
 
Feb 25, 2011
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The only way to be sure is to do a DoD spec 35 pass zeroing.

Then, remove the platters from the drive and place them each into individual burlap sacks.

Beat them methodically with medium-large rocks for 6 hours each until you have something about the consistency of sand.

Bury each sack in a different state.

Your data is secure.

If that is too much work, then what Corky said is right on the ball.

So you're not a fan of the cleansing power of fire? (Heat sufficient to melt the platters will also demagnetize them.)

-wh40kpurifyit.jpg-
 

NickelPlate

Senior member
Nov 9, 2006
652
13
81
The only way to be sure is to do a DoD spec 35 pass zeroing.

Then, remove the platters from the drive and place them each into individual burlap sacks.

Beat them methodically with medium-large rocks for 6 hours each until you have something about the consistency of sand.

Bury each sack in a different state.

Your data is secure.

If that is too much work, then what Corky said is right on the ball.

I don't think it's good enough to bury the material. To be extra sure I'd recommend dumping the contents of the sacks in the ocean (in different locations of course).
 

billyb0b

Golden Member
Nov 8, 2009
1,270
5
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DBAN will do the job just fine

depending on the HD size, the rotation speed, and the wipe method you could look at many many hours.

i recently wiped a 2TB 3.5" samsung spinning at 5400rpm. it took 73 hours to do a DoD 5220.22-M wipe (7 pass)

i ran it on a small low power pc in the kitchen that could afford to be taken offline for that long to wipe. it took forever but dban securely wiped it
 

serpretetsky

Senior member
Jan 7, 2012
642
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101
in order to actually erase the data you must overwrite the entire drive with a single pass or more of random data (single pass is sufficient). You can use the DBAN tool someone mentioned earlier or if you have a linux distro you use
http://how-to.wikia.com/wiki/How_to_wipe_a_hard_drive_clean_in_Linux
using the random data example.

The US government wipes a drive 7 times, but i have never seen a case of recovery from a even a single random wipe.
 

NickelPlate

Senior member
Nov 9, 2006
652
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The oft recommended and free ccleaner has a built in drive wiper utility which I've used before giving old hard drives away. You can configure from 1 to 35 passes.
 

stevech

Senior member
Jul 18, 2010
203
0
0
Yeah, lots of free disk wipers, good enough. Drive vendors have free tools too, like WD and Seagate.