Scott> On Thu, Feb 7, 2013 at 10:25 AM, Sean Lutner <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Neither of those methods ensure that there would be no access to >> the data off the platters. In the case of just unscrewing the bolt, >> if you don't then spin the drives up to cause the physical damage, >> I would just take the platters out entirely and pop them in another >> drive. Very simple. In the case of drilling holes you may prevent >> access to some data but very little of the over all data and you >> can piece things back together if need be. Realistically, if you have a couple of holes in the platters, once the drive spins up and the head moves across the hole, it's going to bounce and the hit the platter, causing all kinds of problems. Again, what level of paranoia are you going to use here? Yes, the NSA/CIA/FBI might be able to pull some data off a platter with holes in it, but at what cost? In 99.999% of all cases, just doing either of these two steps will effectively destroy the drive and any data on them. If you need certainty, then shredding or a sledge hammer (a warped platter isn't going to be ready by anyone) will do the trick to any degree. >From the sound of the original request, I suspect that the drives were already dead and not responding to accesses, but had potentially some risk of data being pulled off them. In that case, just going the next step of disassembling them or drilling holes would make it effectively impossible to recover data from them. Is that a 100% guarrenttee? Of course not. What in life is? >> DoD level wipes or >> physical shredding following DoD level wipes are the only methods >> that can ensure that no nefarious folks get your data. _______________________________________________ bblisa mailing list [email protected] http://www.bblisa.org/mailman/listinfo/bblisa
