Top Stories
|
eBay hard drive spills out governor's campaign documents30 Aug 2007 23:49 A bargain at $69GeezBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 00:40 GMT
How hard is it to format a drive before selling it? I know data can be recovered easily with simple utilities (done it myself many times), but just formatting it is enough to discourage 99.9% of would-be information thieves. Or use one of the many available freeware data-wipe utils. Or even download a utility from the manufacturer's website--most of these have the ability to write all 0s to the drive. Again, are people really that ignorant? re: GeezBy Jason Harvey
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 01:31 GMT
"Again, are people really that ignorant?" you really have to ask? SillyBy Bracken Dawson
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 02:02 GMT
I actually hate seeing people selling computers on second hand without the hard drive, it's not hard to render all data gone. They're just loosing money and wasting good hardware. StoopidBy Daniel Ballado-Torres
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 02:42 GMT
An IT bloke that doesn't know about PGP? Sheesh, 60 bucks and you get full HD crypto. Or go for the free version and wipe the stuff. Hell, even badblocks has the "aggressive pattern check" that basically does a datawipe on the thing! There's no excuse on this blooper, not even "my wife sold my sooper sekrit harddrive". Of course, you can wipe data the hard way: lotsa magnets, rubber mallets or a hammer. Do it the BOFH way ;) This fool holds an important post?By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 02:57 GMT
Forget the data on the drive - this buffoon couldn't reimage with a FULLY FUNCTIONAL drive as the master?!? And he's now the liason to the governor on all state IT matters!? No wonder government IT is so bad. Re: GeezBy Chris Marshall
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 03:29 GMT
>Again, are people really that ignorant? Yup. Never mind the liaison guyBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 07:14 GMT
Surely if the wife didn't know the origins of the hard drive -which she clearly didn't - she shouldn't have been selling it on eBay at all, "as new" or otherwise! Of course!By David Perry
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 07:16 GMT
@This fool holds an important post? Think Bush..... @Silly. What's loosing? Moral of the StoryBy JP
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 07:33 GMT
Keep your wife away from your tech kit! Though I don't see how good he could have been at his job, if he got the drive but couldn't recover the data on it, and his wife then sells it on as new... @ David PerryBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 08:38 GMT
@Silly. What's loosing? The result of Guinness and vindaloo. HammersBy Steve
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 09:06 GMT
My Mum wanted to dump an old (very old, 486/W95) system. She asked me to destroy the hard drive, since at a massive 340Mbytes it wasn't ever going to be worth reusing. I learned something interesting. Even with a drive that old, it is *really* difficult to take a hammer & chisel to it :) BOFH or not, after years of always taking backups to protect data it just goes against the grain to assault a disk with a hammer! As for that little pinging 'chime' when the chisel hit the platter... ouch, that hurts. @LoosingBy Kevin Johnston
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 09:25 GMT
It is when an archer releases an arrow and is part of the origin of a 'fast and loose' person. When a leader shouts Fast all archers must hold still but an untrustworthy archer might loose a nocked arrow in error hence fast and loose. Bugs me as well when people type loose instead of lose. :< The wife was going to ditch'em I tells ya!By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 10:21 GMT
1 word Trucrypt........... actually that's a joining of 2 words true and crypt but you guessed that........ MagnetsBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 11:15 GMT
Re: "Of course, you can wipe data the hard way: lotsa magnets, rubber mallets or a hammer. Do it the BOFH way ;)" Just for fun, on a slow day at work, I took a failing laptop hard drive & decided to expose it to the effects of a bulk tape eraser/degaussing coil. The coil was strong enough to actually violently lift the drive, slamming it into the coil with a loud clank, then emitting an angry buzz until I released it. I did this several times, from several different angles, finding it amusing. Then I decided to try to read the drive. To my astonishment, I could read all of the data still! Running chkdsk on the drive only turned up very minor errors after all of this. So I'd say the "lotsa magnets" approach is out... the hammer still works pretty well tho. Something you're missingBy John A Blackley
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 15:56 GMT
@Geez and @Stoopid, et al Please consider that we're talking about Arkansas pols here and eliminate the need for redundant questions. Thank you Amateur technicians deliver amateur resultsBy b shubin
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 17:09 GMT
this man should seek other employment. he does not belong in IT. since he had functional hardware, there's an easy solution. a free utility, provided as image download, can boot from floppy, CD, DVD, USB, and flash, provides various levels of DoD-level secure wipe: http://dban.sourceforge.net/ @HammersBy laird cummings
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 17:34 GMT
"...after years of always taking backups to protect data it just goes against the grain to assault a disk with a hammer!..." Huh. I never find it difficult at all. Quite theraputic, really. Mind you, I don't usually stoop to the chisel level - I use a 16lbm splitting maul, which usually goes straight through the drive, platters and all, on the first go. Once I used a 20-ton hydraulic press with a punch. That was a real hoot, but too slow for day to day destruction. Secure Wipe, Hammers, Chisel, Magents and Microwaves....By Sampler
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 18:08 GMT
You've all got the wrong idea, the real question you should be asking yourself is: does it blend? Off Topic - butBy Andy Bright
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 19:00 GMT
Someone needs to tell Americans the correct pronunciation of Arkansas and Maryland is Ar-Kan-Zers and Mary-Lernd. (See Kansas and anything ending in Land). Not Ar-Kern-Sor and Marry-Lernd. Cheers -Randomly Relocated English Person Andy shut upBy Alan Donaly
Posted Sunday 2nd September 2007 04:49 GMT
I live in Kansas we don't need any extra help looking stupid Apparently there was absolutely nothing wrong with the drive so what was the fools problem I assume it was formatted for XP just shove it in your PC du jour and install Linux over it and no one will ever find your old files. Seagates are tough to break I killed a Gateway with one once dropped it the full tower length into the bottom graphics card and that was that though I still have the drive three years later and it still works fine. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
Breaking Hardware News
Dell has announced it's incorporating touch-screen functionality - in the form of an easy-to-install firmware upgrade - on it's Latitude XT tablets.
Newsletter |