How to Completely Erase a Hard Disk Drive Washington DC

Don't let a good deed turn into a security breach. These tips can help you avoid data theft when donating a computer system.

Local Companies

AT&T Inc.
(202) 638-7876
785 7th St., NW
Washington, DC
Comcast
(202) 832-2001
900 Michigan Ave., NE
Washington, DC
ACT 1
703-418-0011
200 12th St S
Arlington, VA
Esp Group LLC
703-418-6311
1225 Jefferson Davis Hwy
Arlington, VA
American Broadband Productions
(202) 331-5556
1667 K St Nw Ste 400
Washington, DC
Verizon Washington, DC
(202) 392-3700
2055 L St., NW
Washington, DC
Cyveillance Inc
703-351-9766
1555 Wilson Blvd
Arlington, VA
Localnet Corp
703-528-1824
1700 N Moore St
Arlington, VA
Hard Corps Inc
703-521-5000
2120 Washington Blvd
Arlington, VA
Rapid Networks
(202) 364-8410
4444 Connecticut Ave NW
Washington, DC

provided by: 
Originally published at Internet.com


If you're ready to invest in a new computer, and your thinking about donating your old computer to a charity, local group or school, it's important to make sure your computer's hard drive is completely free of data.

In the "no good deed ever goes unpunished" department, you need to ensure that you don't donate more than you planned. The last thing you want is to pass on a PC when sensitive business information, or even personal information such as stored passwords, personal documents and credit card numbers that could be retrieved. When you donate a computer, you don't know where it may end up or if it will go through the hands of a malicious person with the capability to restore previously recorded and deleted data.

There are many ways to keep your data from being retrieved. Obviously, you can choose to physically smash the drive, but there are alternatives that enable you to keep the system intact so you can donate a complete system.

Erasing and Formatting - Just Not Secure Enough
Simply erasing all the data on your hard drive and formatting it is not enough security. You can spend hours going through your hard drive and deleting all the files and documents you want but, in Windows, using the delete key on your keyboard basically only removes the shortcuts to the files making them invisible. Deleted files still reside on the hard drive and a quick Google search will show many system-recovery software programs that will allow anyone to reinstate that data.

Formatting the hard drive is only slightly more secure than erasing the files. While formatting erases only the address tables, not the data on the disk, it makes it much more difficult to recover the files. However a computer specialist would be able to recover most or all the data that was on the disk before the reformat.

If you accidentally reformat a hard disk, being able to recover most or all the data that was on the disk is a good thing. However, if you're preparing to retire or donate a system, this obviously makes you more vulnerable to data theft.

For some businesses and individuals, a disk format may be something you consider secure enough, depending, of course, on the type of data and information you saved to your computer. As long as people understand that formatting is not a 100 percent secure way to completely remove all data from your computer, then they can make an educated choice between formatting and even more secure methods. If you have decided a disk format is a good choice, at the very least to do a full format rather than a quick format.

Disk Wiping Options (a.k.a. Data Dump)
Even more secure than reformatting is a process called disk wiping. The term disk wiping is not only used in reference to hard drives but with any storage device such as CDs, RAIDs or thumb drives. Disk wiping is a secure method of ensuring that data, including company and individually licensed software on your computer and storage devices is permanently deleted before recycling or donating the equipment.

The right software applications can restore previously stored data, so the disk wiping process will actually overwrite your entire hard drive with data, several times. Once you format the newly wiped drive, you'll find it all but impossible to retrieve the data that was on the drive before the disk wipe.

While disk-wiping algorithms differ from product to product, they all generally write the entire disk with a number (zero or one), after which you'll need to reformat the drive. The more times the disk is overwritten and formatted the more secure the disk wipe is, but the trade-off is the extra time to perform additional rewrites.

The government standard (DoD 5220.22-M), considered a medium-security level, specifies three iterations to completely overwrite a hard drive six times. Each instance makes two wrrite-passes over the entire drive; the first pass inscribes ones (1) over the drive surface and the second inscribes zeros (0) onto the surface. After the third iteration, a government-designated code of 246 is written across the drive, and then a final pass verifies the process.

You can buy or download a variety of products to perform more secure disk wipes. If time to perform the disk wipe is a consideration, there are also tech security companies who offer disk wipe services.

Adapted from webopedia.com.

Do you have a comment or question about this article or other small business topics in general? Speak out in the SmallBusinessComputing.com Forums. Join the discussion today!

Author: Vangie Beal

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

AT&T Inc.

2026387876
785 7th St., NW
Washington, DC

Related Local Events
ESRI International User Conference
Dates: 7/13/2009 - 7/17/2009
Location: Washington Convention Center
Washington, DC
View Details

Annual Technology for Government Reception
Dates: 6/10/2009 - 6/10/2009
Location: Renaissance Mayflower Hotel
Washington, DC
View Details

Real Secrets to Drive Website Traffic With SEO and Online News Releases
Dates: 6/3/2009 - 6/3/2009
Location: Mandarin Oriental, Washington, D.C
Washington, DC
View Details