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World TOP Headlines: => Latest Security News & Alerts => Topic started by: Samker on 24. June 2009., 23:51:48

Title: Securely Wipe Your Hard Drive
Post by: Samker on 24. June 2009., 23:51:48
(http://rbgarner.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/191618_hard_drive.jpg)

Reader Jim Bradley seeks a way to securely wipe the data from his hard drive. He writes:

Some time back there was an ad for software that would erase hard disks with the method approved by the U.S. government by writing 0s and 1s on the drive in several manners. Does such a software still exist, what is the name of the vendor, and is it for the Macintosh (PowerPC and Intel)?

Such software does exist and you'll be happy to know that it's free and likely already on your Mac if you're running Tiger or Leopard. You'll find it this way:

Launch Disk Utility (/Applications/Utilities) and when the application opens select the drive you want to erase in the pane on the left side of the Disk Utility window. Click the Erase tab and then click the Security Options button below. In the sheet that appears you'll see four options--Don't Erase Data, Zero Out Data, 7-Pass Erase, and 35-Pass Erase.

The Don't Erase Data option--as its name implies--doesn't erase any data. Rather, it wipes out the directory that tells your Mac where your data is. Any number of third-party utilities could scour your drive and recover your data after you've employed this option. So, not secure.

Zero Out Data writes zeros over your drive one time. It's not up to government standards, but recovering data from this drive would be a chore.

7-Pass Erase meets that US Department of Defense 5220-22 M standard about which you've heard so many good things. It writes over your data seven times.

And for the truly paran... er, concerned, there's the 35-Pass Erase option, which, as the name hints, writes junk over your drive 35 times. If you want your data super-mega-ultra-really gone, this is the one to use.

Note that the 7-pass option takes seven times longer to overwrite your data than does the Zero Out Data option. Likewise, the 35-Pass option takes 35 times as long.

If even these options leave you with a slight case of the jim-jams, allow me to propose the Multi-Pass Sledgehammer option. If you need your data to be totally unrecoverable and are willing to sacrifice a hard drive to make that happen, extract the drive from your Mac, take it out back, and beat the living hell out of it.

(PCW)
Title: Re: Securely Wipe Your Hard Drive
Post by: haz on 25. June 2009., 06:56:46
That is for Mac OS only, right ?
In Linux there is the command "dd" which in the same manner writes whatever data you want ( zeros, ones, random, ..etc ) on the HDD, and its really hard to recover, you can do as many loops as you wish by writing a small "for" statement to repeat the "dd" command..
Of course you can use any Linux live CD ( like knoppix or the small distros that fit in a USB Flash ) to erase any HDD if you boot the machine with it..
What do you have for windows ? is there any free and reliable software ?
Title: Re: Securely Wipe Your Hard Drive
Post by: F3RL on 25. June 2009., 09:25:17
Samker and haz, I have posted a new topic in regard to securly wiping hard drive.
The one I have added is live distribution, not OS-dependent - have a look :)
Title: Re: Securely Wipe Your Hard Drive
Post by: Samker on 25. June 2009., 17:54:59
Thanks man, very useful.  :thumbsup:

Quote
What do you have for windows ? is there any free and reliable software ?

This is good question, we will need to search for something good!?
Title: Re: Securely Wipe Your Hard Drive
Post by: devnullius on 20. January 2014., 20:45:17
The solutions here are for (older) Mac OS versions. For other solutions, non-Mac  based, go here: http://scforum.info/index.php/topic,5474.msg22615.html#msg22615

Karma!

devnullius