Protect and purge your personal files
Eliminate private documents permanently from your hard drive

When you stop and think about it, your home computer holds a lot of information 
about you- credit card numbers, bank account details, passwords, medical 
information, websites you've visited, and those deep, dark secrets you share 
with your best friend via email.

There naturally comes a time when you're ready for an upgrade, whether it be a 
bigger hard drive or an entirely new PC. But what should you do with the old 
one? And what about the information on it? You need to remove this information 
whether you donate it, sell it, or trash it.

Imagine your hard drive- including all of your personal information-falling 
into the wrong hands. That's what could happen if you don't do a little damage 
control before you dispose of your hard drive.

Why "delete" isn't enough
Many people think that clearing their history, deleting files and cookies, and 
emptying their computer's recycle bin is enough. Not so, according to IT 
specialist Tony Lum. He says that's like removing the table of contents in a 
book. The chapters (or your files, in this case) are still there, they're just 
harder to find.

What you've actually done is remove a particular file from the disk's index. 
The file itself still exists on your hard disk. For the average person it's 
harder to recover, but an experienced programmer (or hacker) could easily 
locate the file. Previous or temporary versions of the file might also be saved 
under different names.

You need to go one step further and overwrite your data. Lum recommends you 
back up everything you want to keep on your hard drive and then run hard -drive 
wiping software, which will overwrite your information with random ones and 
zeros. He also recommends you use a program that overwrites your data more than 
once. The more it's overwritten, the harder it is to recover.


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Select software to wipe your hard drive clean
Is it impossible to retrieve your information afterward? Not 100 percent, but 
Lum says that unless the CIA is after you, you should be in the clear after 
using one of these disk-erasing tools that are available for download online:

  a.. Active@ KillDisk: This free hard -drive eraser overwrites data using 
zeros. You can upgrade to the professional version that conforms to the U.S. 
Department of Defense (DOD) standards.

  b.. Softpedia/DP Wiper: IT consultant Daniel Gresser recommends freeware 
programs from Softpedia, like DP Wiper, which overwrites in from one to 35 
passes and has DOD-compliant wiping.

  c.. WipeDrive: WipeDrive overwrites your data as many times as you like and 
runs a verification test.

"Always keep a record of where all important files are stored," says Gresser, 
who recommends deleting each file by dropping it into DP Wiper and selecting 
the kind of wipe required.Unless you take the hard drive out and keep it, to 
get a PC ready for sale, Gresser suggests that PC users delete the following 
using DP Wiper or a similar program: 

  a.. Everything in the My Documents folder.

  b.. All temporary Internet files.

  c.. All cookies.

  d.. All files relating to personal and financial matters that may have been 
stored in folders other than My Documents.

  e.. All email: Outlook Express users need to search for and delete .dbx 
files; Windows Mail users need to search for and delete .eml files; and 
Microsoft Office Outlook users need to search for and delete .pst files. This 
will send them to the recycle bin for secure deletion. Also, remember to remove 
all email account settings and passwords.



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Reinstall your operating system to overwrite files
Your operating system's installation CD should allow you to simultaneously 
reinstall and clear your hard drive. Lum says this should be enough to prevent 
the average person from obtaining personal information from your hard drive. 
However, he says he's managed to salvage data from computers using third-party 
software even after an operating system was reinstalled. 


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Protect information on your work computer
You'll also want to think about personal information on your work computer when 
it's time to move on to a new job. You can't wipe the hard drive since the 
computer isn't your property, but you can make it somewhat harder to find 
sensitive information by deleting personal emails, clearing your web browser's 
cache and history, deleting any personal files on your hard drive, and emptying 
your trash or recycle bin.


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Playing it safe
Still concerned? Don't dispose of your hard drive. "The bottom line is, if 
you're really concerned about identity theft, then don't give away your hard 
drive," says Lum.

Gresser also recommends taking some preventative measures when you set up your 
new computer. "One thing people can do to make disposing of PCs with sensitive 
data easier down the road is to encrypt their data as soon as they get a new PC 
or hard disk," he says. "If strong encryption is used, then you can format the 
drive and dispose of it with the computer. Someone who wanted to retrieve the 
data would first have to undelete the data and then try to break the 
encryption, which is not going to happen." He suggests using BestCrypt from 
Jetico to encrypt your documents.

Article written by Alyson Munroe and adapted from an original piece from 
Microsoft Home Magazine.



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Vikas Kapoor,
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