Silly question about secure deletion of files
David Shaw
dshaw at jabberwocky.com
Fri Jan 23 23:52:48 CET 2009
On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 07:39:25PM -0300, Faramir wrote:
> Robert J. Hansen escribi??:
> ...
> > With a defrag, if you successfully rearrange 95% of the affected blocks
> > then you've substantially improved your drive performance. Sure, it'll
> > report that it's done 100%, but who cares, really?
>
> Not me ;)
>
> > With disk overwriting, if you successfully overwrite 95% of your
> > sensitive data, you may still be putting yourself at substantial risk.
> > Especially since it will report that it overwrote all your data.
>
> Ok, that answers my question.
>
> Usually I don't see thing from the same point of view than you, I
> mean, usually I think about "secure deletion" if the file can't be fully
> recovered by the use of a simple recovery tool (let's say, Norton
> unDelete)... but of course, in other context, fragments of information
> can be very dangerous and the attacker can bring the hdd to an
> specialized lab...
> In other words, if I intend to destroy the PhD thesis of my brother,
> overwritting 50% of it would be more than enough to make him cry like a
> baby. But if I intend to destroy the list of infiltrated agents of the
> Rebel Alliance, even a 5% of the list would make Darth Vader be really
> happy.
>
> To David Shaw: I didn't get your point, since both defragmenting and
> overwriting files involve to be able to control what is written and
> where is written... I think both concepts are related somehow.
This is incorrect. Defragmentation does not need to land on a exact
place on the disk, and overwriting does. Defragmentation ignores
remapped blocks, while overwriting cannot, etc.
David
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