Securely delete files...
Chris Walters
cwal989 at comcast.net
Thu Aug 21 07:45:48 CEST 2008
Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> I can only speak for myself here, but I strongly suspect Werner, David,
> Mark and everyone else who's been chiming in will agree -- we are not
> talking about total destruction of hard drives as something you should
> want to do.
>
> We're talking about total destruction of hard drives as the _only
> realistic way to scrub data._
I agree, this is a purely theoretical discussion for me. I don't have such
sensitive data on my drives to want to nuke them.
> ObWarning: many of the techniques we've discussed for destroying hard
> drives are really quite dangerous. Thermite is _not_ a friendly
> chemical. Neither is sulfuric acid. Even an approach as low-tech as
> hammering the platters into oblivion can be dangerous -- see Werner's
> statement about all the shards that hit his safety glasses. Before
> destroying a hard drive, learn how to do it safely.
Ah, yes. The obligatory warning. One method that I suggested would get the
gold star for dangerous, foolhardy, do not do: Placing your hard drive in the
core of an active nuclear reactor. Acid is not safe either - I started off in
chemistry... I would sooner use 30 M hydrochloric acid than sulfuric acid -
why? It is easier to obtain - the problem is disposing of what is left, as if
you pour it down the drain, it will start corroding your sink (unless it is
ceramic), and your pipes. Not a pretty picture.
Regards,
Chris
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