Re: A new privacy and log scrubber for KDE4, Firefox, & Flash
"I don't think there is any way to guarantee no leakage on journaled filesystems, though, especially because you don't know where else the fs may have stored pieces of the file before srm even got to it."
That's probably the best argument, rendering moot further analysis of the effects of journaling.
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/...isks_gnu_linux
-- yes, that's one of the articles that got me started on this.
"Certainly not. rm only marks the space consumed by the file as 'available', it doesn't remove the data. (That's why it's so much faster than srm, and why kscrubber took an hour to run on sithlord's system)."
Misunderstanding on that one, yes I realize what rm is vs srm. But the first point renders this issue moot anyway.
"A really clean option is to delete files you don't want, copy the rest to a backup, overwrite or wipe the original partition completely with dd, format it, then copy the files back. Short of dropping the drive into a bucket of acid to dissolve it and using a new one, that's probably the best you can do. It's a good idea when setting up a new OS."
Yes, agreed, almost verbatim from something I'm writing now.
(where I conclude, "You can't clean up your system perfectly, you can't get it all, so you MUST regularly do wiping and re-installs on fresh partitions/disks (Section XYZ).")
And see my recent post on it where I used dd to do exactly that:
Privacy Cleanup 101
http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/inde...opic=3090100.0
Replies 7 & 8 (re dd methods, wiping)
I think we may differ about modern data recovery vs "number of passes.".
After a lot of reading-research, I pretty much agree with Starman's position about safe wiping: one pass of zeros is sufficient with modern drives. Gutman's work has been refuted by Freedman and by Gutman himself in his added prologue. Modern analysis supports the one wipe (on high-density ECC drives). I'm writing something on it now for a revision of my 101 how-to (which will also incorporate a lot of your stuff and kscrubber). Not knowing where to post it so you can see it, for now I put it in
Reply #6, privacy Cleanup 101, as a "Draft":
http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/inde...9244#msg109244
(with references)
In particular, the 38-pass thing is obsolete, as is the so-called "government's 7-pass requirement" (at least the logic for it is unclear).
Thanks again for your feedback.
I should be posting my 101 update in a week or so, I hope.
"I don't think there is any way to guarantee no leakage on journaled filesystems, though, especially because you don't know where else the fs may have stored pieces of the file before srm even got to it."
That's probably the best argument, rendering moot further analysis of the effects of journaling.
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/...isks_gnu_linux
-- yes, that's one of the articles that got me started on this.
"Certainly not. rm only marks the space consumed by the file as 'available', it doesn't remove the data. (That's why it's so much faster than srm, and why kscrubber took an hour to run on sithlord's system)."
Misunderstanding on that one, yes I realize what rm is vs srm. But the first point renders this issue moot anyway.
"A really clean option is to delete files you don't want, copy the rest to a backup, overwrite or wipe the original partition completely with dd, format it, then copy the files back. Short of dropping the drive into a bucket of acid to dissolve it and using a new one, that's probably the best you can do. It's a good idea when setting up a new OS."
Yes, agreed, almost verbatim from something I'm writing now.
(where I conclude, "You can't clean up your system perfectly, you can't get it all, so you MUST regularly do wiping and re-installs on fresh partitions/disks (Section XYZ).")
And see my recent post on it where I used dd to do exactly that:
Privacy Cleanup 101
http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/inde...opic=3090100.0
Replies 7 & 8 (re dd methods, wiping)
I think we may differ about modern data recovery vs "number of passes.".
After a lot of reading-research, I pretty much agree with Starman's position about safe wiping: one pass of zeros is sufficient with modern drives. Gutman's work has been refuted by Freedman and by Gutman himself in his added prologue. Modern analysis supports the one wipe (on high-density ECC drives). I'm writing something on it now for a revision of my 101 how-to (which will also incorporate a lot of your stuff and kscrubber). Not knowing where to post it so you can see it, for now I put it in
Reply #6, privacy Cleanup 101, as a "Draft":
http://kubuntuforums.net/forums/inde...9244#msg109244
(with references)
In particular, the 38-pass thing is obsolete, as is the so-called "government's 7-pass requirement" (at least the logic for it is unclear).
Thanks again for your feedback.
I should be posting my 101 update in a week or so, I hope.
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