It's a good one liner, but you're only destroying like 10% of the surface
area of the disk. Granted this will probable render a large amount of the
data unreadable, but it's not a guarantee.

But sure, like I said, it's not economical to do data recovery for a home
users' info so drill away.

--Adam

On Thu, Jan 19, 2012 at 8:09 PM, Ryan Coleman <ryanjcole at me.com> wrote:

>
> On Jan 19, 2012, at 8:06 PM, Yaron wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 19 Jan 2012, Adam Nave wrote:
> >
> >> I gotta say, physically destroying drives is serious overkill for the
> home
> >> user.
> >
> >
> > I believe you misspelled "serious fun".
>
> As a former DoD family member one said: The only way to make sure there's
> nothing recoverable on the drive (meaning not making it financially worth
> it to recover) is to drill a few holes randomly spaced from the center of
> the drive with a 1/4" bit.
>
> Apparently that's the "DoD-proof" level of data destruction.
>
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