On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 17:06:55 +0100, "Jarryd" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I am getting more and more concerned about chucking away old machine that
>might have sensitive data on them. Currently, when I am going to chuck away
>a PC that has a HDD in it I beat the hell out of it with a hammer, after
>performing a low-level format on it. But I know that this doesn't really
>guarentee that all the data is wiped. To be honest, I am probably stressing
>over nothing. I mean, who the hell is going to go to great lengths to
>recover data belonging to my company from a banged up HDD all set to zeros.
>But then I thought I might as well CMA (as opposed to CYA) and check if it
>has gotten easier for techno-crooks to get at data since I last checked, and
>if so what new methods / tools have been developed to safeguard against it.
>There are loads of tools out there and I can't work out if I need to pay for
>something or if I can use a freebie, and if I do have to pay for something
>then what do I need to look out for?
>
>CIA,
>
>Jarryd
>
Hey Jarryd,
I pulled this off a thread in microsoft.public.win2000.secuirty:
"Darik's Boot and Nuke
http://dban.sourceforge.net/
DBAN is a self-contained boot floppy that securely wipes the hard
disks
of most computers. DBAN is open source and will work on DOS, Windows
3.1, Windows 95/98/NT/ME/2000/XP, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, or Linux,
and also meets the DoD cleaning and sanitizing standard."
Check out this thread for more information:
http://groups.google.com/group/micro...abf1c30cc3ba76
Hope this helps.
--Adam Joseph Cook, Mechanical Engineer