What Is The Universal (world Wide) Understanding Behind Degaussing Harddisks?

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Good evening from Singapore!

The foremost question which I want to ask is, what is the universal
(world wide) understanding behind degaussing hard drives?

I work for No Secrets Agency (NSA) Pte Ltd (fictitious company name used). My sales manager Edward Joseph Snowden (fictitious individual name used) had *promised* our customer Leave Me in the Lurch (S) Pte Ltd (fictitious company name used) that we would “DEGAUSS” their hard disks after the PC replacement and data migration exercise for 15
trillion PCs (fictitious number used).

PC = Personal Computer, which includes desktops and laptops

Last Friday, I had already reflected to my sales manager Edward Snowden that since we are definitely NOT going to wipe our customer’s data by using strong and powerful magnets (physical means), should I
send an email to the IT Administrator of our customer Lady Gaga
(fictitious individual name used) asking her which data sanitization method (by software means) I should use? My sales manager Edward Snowden had quickly deflected my concerns (that is, wanting to send an email to our customer Lady Gaga asking her which data sanitization method I should use).

I had brought up to the sales manager Edward Snowden a number of data wiping methods by software means last Friday.

(1) Very very simple 1-pass data wiping, quickest

a. Using “sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda”, overwriting harddisks from beginning to end with zeroes, where /dev/sda refers to the 500 GB
harddisk, not /dev/loop0 and not /dev/sdb which refers to the bootable live operating system on thumb drive

b. Using “sudo dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sda”, overwriting harddisks from beginning to end with random data, where /dev/sda refers to the
500 GB harddisk, not /dev/loop0 and not /dev/sdb which refers to the bootable live operating system on thumb drive

Any bootable Live CD/DVD/flash media could do it.

(2) 3-pass U.S. Government/Department of Defense (DoD) standard (DoD 5220.22-M)

Certified commercial software required

(3) 7-pass U.S. Government/Department of Defense (DoD) standard (DoD 5220.22-M)

Certified commercial software required

(4) 35-pass Gutmann method, slowest

Certified commercial software required

All these was last Friday. In the midst of our argument over the cellular network “just now”, my sales manager Edward Snowden tried to cover up himself by suddenly and unexpectedly making an excuse that he had told me last Friday I was supposed to wipe user data only, not the operating system!

If he had wanted me to wipe user data and retain/keep the Windows operating system, he should simply have told me to Reset the PC (for Windows 10 only) or use a =secure File Shredder=! For Windows 7, you can still wipe user data and preserve the operating system by using the Recovery Partition. On Lenovo desktops, press and hold F11 when Windows 7 is starting and reset to factory defaults.

I had advised my sales manager Edward Snowden not to use BIG WORDS
like “degaussing the harddisk” and market to the customer using these big words. Any person who sees the word “degauss” would have understood it to mean sanitize *ALL* data on the harddisk straight away and without question.

Please refer to Figure 1. Exhibit A below for the “degaussing”
instructions communicated to me by my sales manager Edward Snowden. Please click the link below.

URI: https://i.imgur.com/bGOMyVs.png

Please advise.

Thank you very much.

Regards,

Mr. Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming Systems and Network Engineer Republic of Singapore
2nd April 2018 Monday 9:35 PM Singapore Time GMT+8

5 thoughts on - What Is The Universal (world Wide) Understanding Behind Degaussing Harddisks?

  • Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming wrote:

    A little too much other info, and overly eloquent. However, if your company told the client that you were going to deGauss all the h/d, that’s what you need to do, contractually.

    If they’ve had a second discussion, and only want the data deleted, that’s another story.

    Is the data on a different partition than the o/s (i.e., /data? If so, you can easily wipe the data, using say, shred, or DBAN (which offers both
    3-pass and the full 7-pass DoD 5220.22-M). If it’s in the same partition, and the same filesystem, you’ve got other issues. How do you *guarantee*
    that there’s no user data – say, installed third-party software mixed with the o/s?

    Note that you really do have to make any third-party software, if it’s commercial, Go Away.

    mark

  • Hello,

    Note that the original message has also been sent to the fedora users mailing list, no doubt it’s spam now.

    Regards,

  • which explains why I’m NOT going to view the attached file. You neer know what is in it.