• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

How to wipe clean my hard drives?

Flame

New Member
I have a couple PC's I've decided to sell but first.... I need to of course wipe them clean. Clear off any trace of me being on them. How do you guys do this? I loaded something a while back called like "drive killer" or something, and it did nothing. What would be your guys suggestions for programs or such? What would do a good job at wiping everything clean?

Thanks in advance all ya 101'ers. :)
 

Pro Image

New Member
Me personally......I never sell my drives.......I would go and buy a couple cheap 40 or60 gigs and stick in the machines and keep the old ones.......

You never know when a drive will go out........and you have a spare ready to go......

like I said thats what I do........

Im sure Techman or someone else has the lowdown on how to do it right........:thumb:
 

hammered

New Member
Just D/L and use Ultrawipe. It can be found as freeware (free of any Malware) at Majorgeeks.com. They check every program they list to ensure its clean to use.
 

Replicator

New Member
I agree 100% with Pro Image . . . I have all my old harddrives . . .

I would sooner smash them with a hammer than sell them !
 

signage

New Member
Pro Image and SignProof Pro state a good point Drives are cheap and you could use your old drive for Backup or additional storeage. But if you decide to clean your hard drive make sure the software you use write 1 and zero's over the drive several times and also just to be sure run software more than once after reinstalling the OS!
 

hammered

New Member
What you are looking for is a software that does a Milspec wipe. There are many and they make it so improbable to recover any usable data, it makes it not worth anyones time to try.
 

slappy

New Member
hope this article helps ya:

Erasing Your Personal Data Before You Sell or Trash Your Hard Drive
People throw out all kinds of things in the trash that can be used to collect information about them and potentially steal their identity. Bank statements, utility bills, magazines, pre-approved credit card solicitations and even other junk mail all contain clues about you.

Many people use some sort of paper shredder to turn all of these kinds of documents into confetti before throwing them out. They want to make sure that nobody can pick up their trash and gain information about them. When it comes to disposing of your computer system, or a hard drive from your computer system, you need to be just as diligent.

Computers continue to become obsolete within a year or two, maybe three, and many people upgrade their existing computers or buy an entirely new one. The old computer or equipment can often be difficult to dispose of because nobody else wants obsolete equipment either.

But, whether you give your computer equipment away, sell it on eBay or just set it at the curb with the rest of your trash, you need to take appropriate precautions to ensure your personal and confidential data does not get passed on.

A study by Simson Garfinkel, author of Database Nation, found that drives purchased on eBay routinely contain sensitive or confidential data. Garfinkel was able to purchase an old ATM machine hard drive on eBay that contained 827 unique account PIN numbers. He purchased another drive on eBay that had previously been owned by a medical center. That drive contained information on 31,000 credit card numbers.

Whether you are planning to sell your drive or computer on eBay, or just throw it away, you need to make sure the data on the drive is impossible to recover. Frankly, data is almost always recoverable to some degree, but with the proper precautions you can at least make sure that Joe Shmoe that bought your hard drive from your garage sale can't access your Quicken financial information.

First, you should understand that deleting files, and even formatting your hard drive, are not sufficient. Both processes really just remove the information the hard drive needs to find the data, not the data itself. Deleted files can be undeleted and formatted hard drives can be recovered.

To be sure that your data is removed beyond all practical ability to recover it, you should use a wiping or erasing utility. These tools overwrite every sector of the hard drive with binary 1's and 0's. Those that meet government security standards even overwrite each sector multiple times for added protection.

Check out the tools below and be sure to adequately wipe or erase your hard drive before you get rid of the drive itself or your whole computer with the drive still in it.

* CyberCide
* WipeDrive
* DataEraser
 

Replicator

New Member
Hard Drive Eraser . . .
 

Attachments

  • sledgehammer.jpg
    sledgehammer.jpg
    13.7 KB · Views: 103

Cadmn

New Member
make sure your cleaner is DOD standard which does a 3x wipe then write on the drive. 3X is required for all DOD data. they are sure enough of a wipe/write of 3times is sufficient to defeat most technology, I feel secure with that thought for personal use.
 

SignBurst PCs

New Member
Flame, this is a judgment call on your part.

Data is almost ALWAYS recoverable, even after formatting and writing over the old data.

That being said, it also requires special software, specialized knowledge, and time to recover a formatted drive.

I like the idea of removing the drive and replacing with an inexpensive drive. If that is not practical, you have a couple choices:

1. Go through the effort of destroying the data with special software
2. Perform a good disk format and reinstall the operating system.

#2 is pretty reasonable in MOST cases. But, If I were trying to destroy data such as a database of credit card #s or social security #s, I would either remove the drive and physically destroy it or use software like "KILLdisk" to format, rewrite, format, rewrite, format, rewrite until there is very little chance of anyone ever recovering the data.

If I were just going to try to clear all my usual data (non-personal) out before selling my PC, I would be inclined to perform a full format (not quick format) and reinstall the OS as a "clean install".

Milspec drive erasing is a great and I am not saying to ignore that choice. If you really NEED to make sure that no one will ever read that data again, better safe that sorry.

I personally see it as overkill in many cases. Consider what you are trying to erase and who you are selling the computer to.
 

Techman

New Member
just get a new drive and keep the old ones. That is the best bet and you will keep another backup on the shelf too.

Hard drive wipes? I watched a technician recover enough from a wiped hard drive to convict a porn perv. There is data stored on your drive in places you never dreamed about. It takes a while to recover data but it can be done. How safe do you want to be? What data is not important.. 99% of the stuff on your drive is useless to others.

Seven wipes is good nine wipes is better.
 

SignBurst PCs

New Member
I agree with Techman. There just isn't a lot of useful data on most people's PCs.

But in the event that you have "sensitive" data, keep your drive or run Killdisk at least 3 times.
 

Flame

New Member
Just want to delete my presence. E-mails, passwords, videos, internet activity, just so it's a clean computer for a new user. Nothing overly "sensitive" per say, but I might just look into new hard drives. :p
 

Alphonse43

New Member
I agree with Cadmn, the 3x wipe & 3x write is a Government standard on HDD cleaning.
Norton Utilities had it on earlier versions, I don't if it still has it.
Alphonse43
 
Top