Hey guys!
I am looking to sell my old laptop on ebay but would like to permenantly erase data from the drive, but also still be able to use the drive after. The only issue I have is the graphics card on the laptop does not work so there is no visable output on the screen or any external monitors, however I do have an external docking station for SATA which I use for my new laptop.
I dont have anything super sensitive on the drive, just the odd downloaded movies, work invoices and family photos.
What methods would guys recommend?
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You could just do a Full Format on the drive. If the person is not savy with disk recovery tools, they will never see your data. If you are paranoid there are dozens of free applications that will "0" out the entire drive. The utilities actually write zeros over every bit on the drive.
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remove the drive, find the manufacturer, go to their website, get their tools download, do a low level format from the dock.
[edit] are you sure there isn't a "recover/re-install" partition on the hard drive you are going to kill?--
"a lot of people are better dead" - prisoner KSC2-303 -
1) Use File Shredder from Glary Utilities to permanently delete files or folders:
2) Create and log in to New user account
3) Delete old user account, when you ask delete old account files, select yes
4) Wipe free space with utility from Glary Utilities:
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Data Lifeguard Diagnostics is what they call it. the format routine is called write zeros.
http://support.wdc.com/product/download.asp?level1=7&lang=en pick a drive like yours, but the software is all the same so it doesn't really matter.
depends on whether or not the laptop is going to be repaired and the windows license is needed for that machine. if not wipe the whole thing.--
"a lot of people are better dead" - prisoner KSC2-303 -
A bit of warning - some of the better disk wiping programs can take days, yes days, to run on some laptops depending on the hardware. For most cases just wiping out the old partitions, installing Linux to the disk, and then wiping it again would be good enough. The odds of some random user being able to do the kind of data recovery necessary to get your old data is pretty low so in my opinion there's little need to go crazy with caution here.
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Eraser
set it up to do a 3 pass erase in options...depending on the size of the HDD it will prolly take 3 to 6 hours to fully do.
Or you can do just a full format. Load it up in the dock and go to My Computer where you can see the drive...right click on it and click "format"...don't use "quick format" and it will redo it all. -
A full format will not overwrite the data on a hard drive. It will simply write a new empty file system and scan the disk for bad blocks (read only). Quick format only writes the empty file system. In both cases any unformat utility can recover a large portion of the files that were on the disk.
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Do a google on "Killdisk" There is a free version which works well.
If it feels good, do it. -
Yeah, I've used active@killdisk too. It can write zeros to a drive,as can the free versions of Acronis from WD and Seagate. There are lots of others as well. As mentioned, it can take quite a while to fill a drive with zeros.
Approaching it from the angle of recovering files, I've only used freeware recovery programs, and it's a big fat pain in the ass, even if the drive is not the system drive and has not been written to after file deletion. It takes a lot of time to do and what you get is a ton of individual unorganized files (a lot of them system files), not folders. Maybe there are not-free programs that make it easier?
I've always wondered if the dangers of one's private information being recovered have not been overstated, at least for the average home user. Surely one zero pass should be enough?
Again, you're going to a lot of trouble to try to recover files. Once you've done that, the fun is just beginning. You have to go through that mess to save and organize usable files into new folders.
[EDIT] To address the original question, you can create a bootable USB drive with a free version of Acronis or Killdisk and wipe the laptop drive that way, no need to take the drive out to do it.
Ideally, you'd do that, then do a factory restore from image. You did make one when you first got the laptop, didn't you? Or there may be a utility to do so even now from a hidden partition on the laptop's hard drive.Last edited by fritzi93; 9th Dec 2011 at 03:19.
Pull! Bang! Darn! -
I disassemble any hard disks I know longer need that are too old anyway. It's on to the chopping block. HDD are cheap these days so why run the risk?
SONY 75" Full array 200Hz LED TV, Yamaha A1070 amp, Zidoo UHD3000, BeyonWiz PVR V2 (Enigma2 clone), Chromecast, Windows 11 Professional, QNAP NAS TS851 -
HDD are cheap these days so why run the risk?
But getting back to the question, what info have you got stired on there thats so valuable?
Its good practice to change your passwords after selling on a hard drive anywayCorned beef is now made to a higher standard than at any time in history.
The electronic components of the power part adopted a lot of Rubycons. -
This is a good point. Each person must decide for his/herself what is an acceptable level of risk here. University researchers have shown that it is still possible to recover data after many disk writes of zeros and ones in attempts to "erase" the hard drive, but such tools are far beyond what any normal person would have access to. I personally believe that one pass should be sufficient for almost all home users.
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UPDATE!
Ok guys I decided to go with Killdisk in the end. I used the 'kill' function to completly wipe the disk. Only problem now is when the drive is connected windows detects it (by making the new device sound) but I cannot find the device using explorer. Have I erased something I shouldnt have? -
I believe you can accomplish the same thing using DiskPart clean all
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/300415
Just be careful when you select the drive that it's the one in the dock.
It's already on your system. No need to download.http://milesaheadsoftware.org/
Fully enabled freeware for Windows PCs. -
You probably have to create a new partition.
Select the disk with DiskPart and do Clean All. All done.http://milesaheadsoftware.org/
Fully enabled freeware for Windows PCs. -
A full format will not overwrite the data on a hard drive. It will simply write a new empty file system and scan the disk for bad blocks (read only). Quick format only writes the empty file system. In both cases any unformat utility can recover a large portion of the files that were on the disk.
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O I forgot to tell you to try free very good low level formatting tool http://hddguru.com/software/HDD-LLF-Low-Level-Format-Tool/
HDD guru I highly recommend (it solve me some problems with xp booting after windows 7 install on some old pc , problem that is one in a million) so it "deletes" all the data and boot mbr sector which is important -
So what you are implying is infinite storage has been created on mechanical hard drives. I never have to buy another because no matter how many times I write new data, I can get some utility to recover the old data. Kind of like compressing a video to one byte. Just zip zip zip until you can't zip anymore!!
http://milesaheadsoftware.org/
Fully enabled freeware for Windows PCs. -
You can use Windows' built in partition tool. Or any of the products mentioned earlier in this thread. Or most of the tools in this list:
http://majorgeeks.com/downloads8.html -
Won't a low level format (usually a download from the HD maker) work as well?
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So what you are implying is infinite storage has been created on mechanical hard drives. I never have to buy another because no matter how many times I write new data, I can get some utility to recover the old data. Kind of like compressing a video to one byte. Just zip zip zip until you can't zip anymore!!
O and to answer explicitly you question the answer is yes and no. You could delete some files with simple method (even with wiping method)mentioned before and write new data over existing data ( for example delete one picture and copy another ) yes you get double the space but when you recover the deleted file ( its best to be recovered on the different location on the disk or another disk because otherwise if you recover to the same spot you rewrite the new picture with the old one again and get the old picture again and lost the new one creating infinite loopLast edited by mammo1789; 16th Dec 2011 at 19:27.
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