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Contents > Product Overview
Users Guide
OVERVIEW
This chapter gives an overview of Active@ KillDisk for Hard Drives application.
Deleting Confidential Data
Modern methods of data encryption are deterring unwanted network attackers
from extracting sensitive data from stored database files. Unfortunately,
attackers wishing to retrieve confidential data are becoming more resourceful
by looking into places where data might be stored temporarily. A hard drive on
a local network node, for example, can be a prime target for such a search. One
avenue of attack is the recovery of supposedly-erased data from a discarded
hard disk drive. When deleting confidential data from hard drives or removable
floppies, it is important to extract all traces of the data so that recovery is
not possible.
Most official guidelines around disposing of confidential magnetic data do not
take into account the depth of today’s recording densities. The Windows DELETE
command merely changes the file name so that the operating system will not look
for the file. The situation with NTFS is similar.
Removal of confidential personal information or company trade secrets in the
past might have used the FORMAT command or the DOS FDISK command. Ordinarily,
using these procedures gives users a sense of confidence that the data has been
completely removed.
When using the FORMAT command, Windows displays a message like this:
Important: Formatting a disk removes all information from the disk.
The FORMAT utility actually creates new FAT and ROOT tables,
leaving all previous data on the disk untouched. Moreover, an image of the
replaced FAT and ROOT tables are stored, so that the UNFORMAT
command can be used to restore them.
FDISK merely cleans the Partition Table (located in the drive's first
sector) and does not touch anything else.
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