On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 8:13 AM, Drew cothar...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
Like the subject says, this pertains to data security, but not just on
linux/bsd/*nix. What I'd like to know is if anyone has a tool they prefer
for wiping hard drives in workstations. As we grow/upgrade systems, we
I agree with Sky. There used to be 'low level format' available on cheap
IDE controllers that worked pretty well.
The best I remember seeing that kept the drive useable was an old
dos/windows program that did a 'distructive disk test'
that I used several times on different disks that were
I use DBAN (Darik's Boot And Nuke) for all my wipes. It uses the same
algorithms that the DoD uses, as well as some other standards that are
more thorough, though probably less useful as they take much, much
longer to run. I trust DBAN enough to take care of our retired drives
that have the
I've heard of Rackable Systems here and there, but they are not a big
player (yet) in the industry. Just big enough to catch an ad in
InformationWeek here there.
http://www.rackable.com/
We used to have several SGI workstations (and a server, I think) at the
Potter Brumfield plant here in
My kids (the 12-yr-old boy 8-yr old girl) like to try and take turns
with the sledgehammer. Of course, I usually end up doing the deed, but
like Jack's idea, it is very satisfying and actually provides a great
workout too! I also sight in my deer rifle with them, and use them for
target practice
Nope, not an oxymoron.. Intelligent Officials would be the oxymoron...
Intelligence Officials are just morons...
Andy
On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 9:36 AM, Jim Peterson jim.sokytec...@gmail.comwrote:
Intelligence officialsan oxymoron of a title if you ask me!
On Wed, 2009-04-01 at 11:35
I'll chime in with another vote for DBAN. The only thing I have to add is
that DBAN (stable) supports most, but not all controllers. I have a second
CD with DBAN beta that seems to support other (AHCI) controllers. Between
the two of those CD's, I don't have any problem wiping drives. I
Interesting... I didn't know IDE did hot swap.
On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 10:05 AM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.eduwrote:
I'll chime in with another vote for DBAN. The only thing I have to add is
that DBAN (stable) supports most, but not all controllers. I have a second
CD with DBAN
- Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.com wrote:
Interesting... I didn't know IDE did hot swap.
I don't know if that was originally intended to do it, but there
are commands in hdparm for spinning down drives and such. Also
commands for rescanning the IDE bus. Of course you have to have
a
I probably shouldn't have called it hot-swap. It is just a removable
drive bay and I always shut down to swap the drives around, although I think
there are some commands to do it, hot, I just don't really trust them.
Chris
On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 9:09 AM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.com
Great information, great discussion. I agree that destroying the drive (the
fire arm method is one I've used personally) is the surest form of data
security, however our retired workstations tend to be better than many
people's (especially our employees) home computers, so we first tend to sell
Michael Chaney wrote:
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 1:35 PM, xor johnw...@gmail.com wrote:
Addressing what intelligence officials describe as a gaping
vulnerability, the legislation also calls for the appointment of a
White House cybersecurity czar with unprecedented authority to shut
down
Mark J. Bailey wrote:
if this is anything like the way HIPAA federalized healthcare data
handling, but for EVERY industry, you might want to consider a career
change! :-) let's hope this doesn't reach that far (or, better yet,
go nowhere at all is my vote). HIPAA also came with a huge
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