Hi Jane,

Could you give me instructions off-list if you prefer please on ho to these things, such as a seven pass erase?

Thank you

James
On 7 Aug 2007, at 11:55, Jane Lee wrote:

Hi James,

I should have been slightly more clear - I did a 7-pass erase on the
drive before doing a clean install of OS X and Windows with zero
identifying information anywhere, including for registration and user
account creation, and then only installed applications and copied
files that I absolutely knew I needed to have for all of two days.  On
top of that there was the obvious points of not using
password-protected sites on an insecure network, disabling everything
in the Sharing panel in System Preferences, and using a secure VPN for
whatever I might need to do.  That was if I even dared to use my
laptop there, rather than back at the hotel.  And once I was back
home, I reformatted just in case there was something on my MacBook
that shouldnt've been, and reinstalled all the stuff I wanted.

Although one could theoretically achieve something similar using
secure empty on a lot of files, there's no way to be completely devoid
of that kind of information short of doing a complete
reinstall...there's so much that could give you away, from your
Safari/Firefox passwords and the Keychain to the files you might have
on the computer.

Honestly, it's annoying to be this insanely secure.  At home, I
wouldn't even care if a friend on the network messed around with me,
or if I used insecure methods to login on sites and whatever else I
might use.  But I didn't want to make a fool out of myself.  Defcon's
network is definitely hostile to the extreme, and I'm sure there were
attendees who showed up with pen and paper instead of a laptop because
of all the threats, grin.

cheers,
jane






On 8/7/07, James Austin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Jane,

How did you wipe your hard drive of personal information? Id you just
put it in the trash and do a scur empty?

Thanks James



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