Study: Used hard-drives full of juicy blackmail material
A research team from Glamorgan University analysed 111 supposedly clean hard drives, bought for less than £1,000, and found that more than half still contained personal information. This included national insurance numbers, evidence of a married woman’s affair and detailed biographical information about children.Link (via Schneier)Ninety-seven of the hard drives were bought on eBay and four at car boot sales. As a control experiment, ten drives were also sourced from LCS Remploy, a company specialising in the destruction of data. All proved to be clean.
The original owners of the other 101 drives included universities, multinational companies and a Church of England primary school in East Yorkshire, all of which were breaking the Data Protection Act by failing to dispose of the information effectively.
Update: Stef sez, "Boing Boing readers may benefit from the free & open-source (GPL) application Darik's Boot & Nuke: it's a self-contained bootable floppy/CD that securely completely wipes the hard disks of most computers. There's even a Mac version now :) Works very well, I use it here at work to make sure that the drives of all the old machines we give away are securely wiped."


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