Originally posted by jglen490
View Post
However, concerning single pass cleanings BleachBit wrote the following:
https://bleachbit.blogspot.com/2009/...ure-erase.html
Compared to Gutmann-35
BleachBit's secure erase method is a single pass with zeros, so why doesn't BleachBit use the Gutmann-35 method? The Guttman secure deletion method gives some people a false sense of security. A long time ago (in the technology timeline) the 35-pass Gutmann method was designed for MFM/RLL hard disk drives. My last computer to include a MFM hard drive was purchased in 1989. Time has passed and technology has changed. Today's PATA/IDE and SATA hard drives are much more dense, and NIST, the NSA, and other experts now agree that a single pass to overwrite data is sufficient.
However, there are two exceptions. First, erasure of individual files (by any erasure method) is not effective in some situations such as using ext3 with the non-default option data=journal. Also, modern hard drives sometimes move data transparently to the operating system. In such cases, it is necessary to either securely wipe the entire disk (in the case of the former) or physically destroy it (in case of the latter).
That said, BleachBit's method is much quicker than Guttman-35 and generally equally effective for everyday use.
BleachBit's secure erase method is a single pass with zeros, so why doesn't BleachBit use the Gutmann-35 method? The Guttman secure deletion method gives some people a false sense of security. A long time ago (in the technology timeline) the 35-pass Gutmann method was designed for MFM/RLL hard disk drives. My last computer to include a MFM hard drive was purchased in 1989. Time has passed and technology has changed. Today's PATA/IDE and SATA hard drives are much more dense, and NIST, the NSA, and other experts now agree that a single pass to overwrite data is sufficient.
However, there are two exceptions. First, erasure of individual files (by any erasure method) is not effective in some situations such as using ext3 with the non-default option data=journal. Also, modern hard drives sometimes move data transparently to the operating system. In such cases, it is necessary to either securely wipe the entire disk (in the case of the former) or physically destroy it (in case of the latter).
That said, BleachBit's method is much quicker than Guttman-35 and generally equally effective for everyday use.
An easier way is merely to heat the plates of the drive to the Curie point for Iron, 770C. Then drop the hot plates into a vat of real bleach as an extra measure for corroding the surfaces of the plates. Or just put the plates into a furnace and melt them into a pool of liquid iron, then pour the hot liquid Iron into a vat of water to create tiny beads of iron. As the beads drop below the Curie point they will be weakly magnetized by the Earth's magnetic field.
Comment