Data recovery specialist Secure Data Recovery has shared the results of a recovery project that attempted to find out how many files could be recovered from a large number of hard drives (rather than solid state drives or memory cards) exclusively for TechRadar Pro.
The companyy purchased 100 hard drives at random and tried to recover data using reasonable means; for this current exercise, it decided not to invest resources into recovering data from damaged or encrypted secure drives, as many of these cases would have been salvageable.
Secure Data Recovery recovered data from 69 drives with 30 damaged HDDs and only one encrypted drive. None of the drives were hybrid ones (which combines a bit of solid state memory and traditional spinning drives). More than 5.7 million files were recovered although that number was skewed by a single hard drive that contained more than 3.1 million files. The oldest recovered drive was a 2.5-inch Western Digital model from 2004; nearly two thirds of the drives purchased were 3.5-inch models.
Totally pure?
The findings highlight a well-known fact: most users don’t have thorough destruction or disposal plans after replacing damaged or obsolete hard drives (e.g. those relying on PATA or SCSI interfaces).
In other words, a worrying minority of users will get rid of hard drives laden with files while some will go through the process of actually deleting them. Only a tiny fraction (1% in the research) will go all the way and actually encrypt the host drive.
Turns out that the years of eBay warning prospective vendors of making sure their laptops and storage devices have been wiped clean probably fell on a ton of deaf ears.
A spokesperson for the company told us that a hard drive is defined as sanitized if no data was found, it was either completely wiped or filled with a random pattern (like the Department of Defense’s three-pass method). The spokesperson also confirmed what happened to the data after recovery: “We followed our typical, strict data-handling practices, which include over 100 security controls. We never viewed the contents of any recovered file and securely purged the data after the exercise.”
How to dispose of a hard drive safely and securely
Jake Reznik, Laboratory Operations Manager at Secure Data Recovery, is an expert at recovering files. Here’s his take on how to get rid of your hard drive (internal or external).
“Before sanitizing, back up important files to avoid data loss (ed: You can use a backup software or a service from our best cloud backup provider), then select the preferred destruction method based on your needs. Erasure software allows the hard drive to be reused but overwrites the original data with random patterns over multiple passes. Afterward, verify that the program properly wiped all data.
Other methods damage the hard drive beyond repair. Degaussing uses a powerful magnetic field to demagnetize the platters and scramble the existing data. Running a hard drive through a media shredder tears the device’s components into small metal pieces. Disintegrating is an enterprise option that reduces particle size to a fine residue. Using a drill to puncture the drive’s platters in several spots is a cost-effective method.
In general, methods that physically destroy the hard drive are more secure. Some parties even choose a combination of destruction methods to ensure the data is unrecoverable. For the best results, consult a professional service to ensure safe hard drive destruction and disposal.”
For further reading, have a look at what’s the difference between data recovery software and data recovery services to find out the best solution for your file recovery woes, understand how data recovery software works and what to look for when choosing data recovery services
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