Decius wrote: I have some hard drives. I want to throw them out. They have data on them. Some of that data is personal correspondence and some of these hard drives are rather old and I have no idea what is on them, but I'd rather not provide that data to whoever happens to be buying stuff from the local computer recycling center on the off chance its personal. Furthermore, if the government is going to hold that police searches of garbage can be conducted without either a search warrant or any constitutionally required factual predicate than one must assume that all garbage is monitored by the state. Anything less would be a pre-911 mentality. If you are willing to provide the state with warrantless access to your hard drives there is really no point in complaining about 4th amendment issues or warrantless searches at borders, for example. So, I can't just throw these drives out. Unfortunately, my local computer recycling center makes stern warnings that they are not responsible for data on devices given to them. I don't see why they won't just buy a degauser, but I'm guessing they don't have one, and I'm not going to go out and drop 2 grand on an industrial degauser for my loft. This puts me in an odd position that I'm sure many of you have also been in: What do you do with old hard drives? Do they become a permanent part of your electronics junk pile, carried with you everytime you move? Do you know of an inexpensive way to destroy them?
If they're still attached to a linux box 'shred /dev/sda', otherwise, I smash them with a hammer. If the media is dented, for all practical purposes, noone is going to get any data off of it. This by the way is a strong advertisement for full-disk encryption. RE: Lazyweb: Hard Drive Degaussing |