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Second Hand Hard Discs Reveal Secrets 446

An anonymous reader writes "BBC News has a story about MIT grads buying old hard discs from eBay and elsewhere, and finding credit card numbers, ATM transactions, porn and emails all accessible on them. Comments? What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"
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Second Hand Hard Discs Reveal Secrets

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  • by Cubeman ( 530448 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:52AM (#5118705)
    This was posted before here [slashdot.org].
    • by devphil ( 51341 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:57AM (#5118754) Homepage


      I'm seriously considering blocking CmdrTaco from the list of people whose stories I see. If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

      Psssst, Taco. A hint for ya: just because you started the site doesn't absolve you of the duty of looking at it once in a while. Say, before you click "Submit."

      • by selderrr ( 523988 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:46PM (#5119076) Journal
        I don't understand how this gets moderated as 'funny'... Anyway, the fact that it reaches +5 means that moderators agree with it. Now if only the message gets thru to the editors :-(

        Seriously taco & co : if once in a while someone posts trolls about dupes, you can mod them down and ignore them. But if 1 out of 5 posts gets a +5 remark, I think it really is time to consider actions.

        At least say sumtin about it. Right now, the editor attitude "hu, can't hear ya" is seriously giving the impression that they don't give a flying fuck about it.
        • Re:It's all Taco... (Score:3, Interesting)

          by MyHair ( 589485 )
          Anyway, the fact that it reaches +5 means that moderators agree with it.

          The moderators seem somewhat divided on the subject. Here are the moderations for that post as of now:

          Offtopic=2, Insightful=1, Interesting=1, Funny=5, Overrated=3, Underrated=1, Total=13

          It got a new funny in the time between when I first read it and the time I looked at the mods. I'm sure it will go down and up a few more times.

          Maybe I should post this as anonymous to avoid the Offtopic Karma hit. Nah, I'll just hit "No Karma Bonus" and feel the 2 point burn.

          By the way, the grandparent post says CmdrTaco does most of the dupes; in my experience it's Timothy who is the king of dupes. I want my money back. :-)
          • Maybe I should post this as anonymous to avoid the Offtopic Karma hit. Nah, I'll just hit "No Karma Bonus" and feel the 2 point burn.

            Or maybe the moderators who give "Offtopic" mods need to learn how to read the parent posts and see if the comment is really off topic or not.

            Tangents can and do appear. While they may be "off topic" for the main heading they can be on topic for the context of the thread. For a bunch of people who gripe about context (benchmarks, blame for root exploits, etc) the "Offtopic" mod seems to be used improperly more often than not.

            • "Offtopic" mod seems to be used improperly more often than not.

              very true indeed.
              This whole little subdiscussion is very likely to get moderated as offtopic, whereas the only consistent topic in the entire comments is the fact that it's a dupe, which is offtopic.
              The whole issue basically comes down to wether slashdot is a "discussion site" or an "information site based on comments". If the main purpose of slashdot is to create a vast and useful archive of comments that can enlighten a visitor seraching for info on a "news for nerd" subject, then indeed we are offtopic. If on the other hand, slashdot is a forum in which nerds can discuss anything they consider nerdstuff, almost everything is on topic !

              I suppose the best way is something in between, but right now, I have the impression the balance is shifted way to much towards the first type. Plus, as many of us have said, the biggest problem is the fact that due to the recursive nature of the problem, the problem itself can't be discussed on slashdot.

              And that attitude is what we usually call censorship. Slashdot is more and more becoming a selfcensoring community. I've tried to find analogies in the real world, but fail to see one so far. The only thing I'm sure of, is that it is not a GoodThing(tm)
      • Too bad there isn't a mechanism to meta-moderate slashdot stories for duplicates. That way you could filter out anything ranging from -1 (I don't care if it is a retread) to 5 (this has to be a beyond-all-doubt repost before I don't see it).
      • It seems like it would be simple to require keywords to be submitted along with a story, say "MIT, HARD DRIVE, EBAY, CREDIT CARD" or maybe even a one-line summary "MIT grads find credit card and other personal data on old hard drives purchased on ebay."

        Then do a keyword search and review any articles with a 60% or greater match that was submitted within the last two months to make sure that you aren't posting a dupe.
      • by Storm ( 2856 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @01:22PM (#5119394) Homepage
        If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

        Now remember, gang, he's a newlywed...He is in that magical time between "I'm a geek and never have a date." and marriage being old hat (or just old). The boy's (possibly for the first time since the site started) got something other than slashdot on his mind...

        • Doesn't he get paid for this? He has to read stories and post them, and he can't check to see whether it's a duplicate? (Let alone a duplicate from last week. If he read anything on the front page, he would have even remembered it)
      • I'm seriously considering blocking CmdrTaco from the list of people whose stories I see. If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

        Actually, I think timothy is the worst about it. The problem is that timothy only seems to duplicate his own stories (how he manages to do that so often, I have no idea), so if you block timothy, you won't see those stories at all.

        TheFrood
      • by stinky wizzleteats ( 552063 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @05:10PM (#5121070) Homepage Journal

        If you look back over the list of duplicates, nearly all of them are Taco's.

        Those of us who are married know exactly what's going on here. When male human becomes married, all memory functions are relegated to the wife. I've been married for 10 years, and I do well to remember to wear pants, much less retain sufficient buffer space to run a news site.

    • by swordboy ( 472941 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:58AM (#5118770) Journal
      Actually,

      I believe the original story was in the cache files on the hard drives in question.

      BaDoom!
      • What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"

        True story: some years back my wife was doing web design for various clients, one of whom had a graphic artist on staff, who gave her a Mac 100M Zip disk that supposedly had some nice artwork on it for my wife to put on the client's web site.

        But the disk appeared to be completely empty, so my wife gave it to me to try to recover the missing files.

        No problem under Linux...I recovered a full 100 megabytes of files...but they were all kinky porn!!!

        We decided to let the guy off easy and didn't tell his employers what he was doing with company computers and media, but my wife was always a bit leery of working with that guy after that.

        (Yes, I did of course save the more, ah, artistic images for, um, later personal, uh, research. ;-)

        This kind of amusing leftovers on media is probably extremely common, but most people don't have any motivation to pry around into deleted files. As I recall, this particular disk just had a bit of file system damage that made it appear empty at first, rather than literally having deleted files, so file system repair was enough to get all of the originals back.

    • Even this dup could be tolerable if it was posted yesterday,
      when we have no news for some hours and were almost forced to discuss the stupid topic on XM and FM radio...
      Hard drives are more interesting.
      I have 2 SCSI Barracuda hard drives which hold some my internal information. The computer in which those drives were installed is already dead. Could you tell me any way to erase data without using SCSI controller?
      I am not planning to physically damage the drives.
      Is it possible?
    • PGP! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:49PM (#5119095) Homepage Journal
      PGP (for windows or mac, ie not GPG) has two commands related to this: wipe file and wipe free space. They overwrite the appropriate sectors of the disk with several patterns designed to ensure that no matter what (common) encoding scheme the hard disk uses, every bit will have been set at least once, zeroed at least once, and overwritten with pseudorandom data at least once. If you set in on a lot of passes, it does an even better job. This would be a cheap (free, except for time and bandwidth to download it) way to make sure your sensitive data doesn't get out.

      That said, experts would tell you that the only reliable way to make sure sensitive data doesn't get out is to thermite your drive.

      Also, what's the one-line unix command (running MacOS X here).

      • http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=51331&cid=51 18950
      • http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=50856&cid=50 91657
      • Re:PGP! (Score:3, Informative)

        One has to keep in mind that these programs are not designed to work with journaling filesystems. The presence of a journal means that the wiper is not actually certain that the blocks were overwritten.

        If one is giving away a hard drive, it is a good idea to low-level format the drive (if it is SCSI), and/or create a partition spanning the entire disk, dd from /dev/zero on to the disk until it is full, and then use a wiper to delete that file.

    • by Longjmp ( 632577 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @01:06PM (#5119227)
      15:08 21 January 03

      At a worldwide conference held in Atlanta, GA, leading scientists and publishers agreed on a new measurement unit to describe the common phenomenon of news stories getting published repeatedly on internet news sites.

      1 Taco = 3 dpm (dupes per minute)

      After a lengthy discussion we eventually agreed to name the new unit after "CmdrTaco", founder of the famous web site Slashdot. We are really happy now, this has been bothering us since the beginning of the internet. said Sag. S. Nochmal, German publisher and chairman of the convention.

      "CmdrTaco" himself was unavailable for comment. He was last seen yelling "Eternal fame" and "must write automatic re-post script now."
    • Let the users do it. When an admin approves and posts a story, it must first be screened by the community. Anyone with sufficiently positive karma can vote on the pending stories, and if a certain story has enough votes marking it as a dupe, the admins are notified and it isn't posted without a manual override.

      It could be a selection right below the metamoderation - "Review Pending Stories". Assuming it waits for 100 votes before deciding what to do, this would only delay the posting process by a few minutes, and it'd make for a much better Slashdot.
  • well... (Score:4, Funny)

    by mschoolbus ( 627182 ) <{travisriley} {at} {gmail.com}> on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:53AM (#5118713)
    I found a bunch of Spice Girl stuff (3GB+) on my friends 'broken' hard drive he gave me... I was sorta afraid when I saw that, really makes me wonder about him...
    • much, much scarier (Score:3, Insightful)

      by zyqqh ( 137965 )
      A roommate of mine once worked at the Berkeley admissions office. Once, he showed up with a stack of ~15 floppies that he said were placed in the trash bin and were completely clean and usable when he tried them. Noticing a cryptic sticker with some numbers and the letters "ETS" on it, I got him to let me take a look at them. Took a raw disk dump. Hmm. Looks like ascii-ish data, as if from a flat database file, unencrypted. And hey, here're names... addresses... social security numbers... and a few more odd 4-digit numbers. about 30 minutes later, having figured out where the fields are, it dawns upon me that i had come upon the ETS test records (SAT I/SAT II) for the '97-'98 incoming applicant class at berkeley (some of the '96-'97 data too). Scarily enough, this also included DOB, SSN, addr, phone number, etc. Apparently the people in charge of processing the data did a quickformat or something and threw the disks right out thinking they're clean.

      The data has since been destroyed for good, but not until after I spent weeks drooling about the hypothetical possibilities that this could've yielded =)
  • How else can we explain how the editors are finding these old stories?
  • by Damion ( 13279 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:54AM (#5118722) Journal
    I found archives of old Slashdot stories and resubmitted them.
  • Yikes!

    Looks like someone must have gotten ahold of CmdrTaco's recently discarded hard drive and recovered the links to old /. stories [slashdot.org]...

    You'd think Taco would have at least used some sort of freespace wiping utility!
  • Wierd files (Score:4, Funny)

    by mrtroy ( 640746 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:56AM (#5118747)
    Well I bought a laptop back in the day...a p166 toshiba which to this day has enough power to word process...surf the internet, but unfortunately the battery and cdrom both died.
    Now when I bought it I thought it was kinda wierd...it was in like a crayola theme and had lots of kids games on it and stuff, but the guy I got it from said it was his kids. So I am about to format it, since it was full of junk and the little 2 gig hd was filled, when all of a sudden what do i discover but a c:\private\ dir!!!
    So...as any good person does I formatted without looking at it. *cough*
    Turns out daddy had a gay pron fetish!
    After being disgusted by this, especially since it was on his KIDS computer, I formatted and lived happily ever after.
    Now, if someone was to buy the laptop from me they would find plenty of straight pron on it!!!
    (and i just might leave it there as a little present)
  • by stienman ( 51024 ) <adavis@@@ubasics...com> on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:58AM (#5118771) Homepage Journal
    I see duplicates. They're everywhere - they don't even know they're duplicates...

    -Adam
  • HEHE (Score:5, Funny)

    by RedWolves2 ( 84305 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:59AM (#5118774) Homepage Journal
    Some MIT kid in the future is going to stumble across the Slashdot hard drives and go "God Damn they posted Duplicates alot."
  • by HealYourChurchWebSit ( 615198 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @11:59AM (#5118776) Homepage

    Discarded computer hard drives prove a trove of personal info [sfgate.com]
    • So, you think you cleaned all your personal files from that old computer you got rid of?
    • Two MIT graduate students suggest you think again.
    • Over two years, Simson Garfinkel and Abhi Shelat bought 158 used hard drives at secondhand computer stores and on eBay
  • Morals? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Pooh22 ( 145970 )
    I've rarely used second hand disks, but even if I did I'd just not look at what's on it. It's kind of like not looking in the neighbour's trashkan...

    Of course, that's no excuse for companies to leave sensitive data from their customers on their leftovers!

    Simon
    • Well, kinda.
      Except you'll never see your neighbour.

      I don't see any problem in looking, it might even give you some insight into other people.
      Just don't do anything bad with the data. (I'm thinking right hand and some Kleenex)
  • Arrgh, I saw the cat pass twice... Errr, the post twice ! :-)

    (Note to moderator : this is a pityful attempt at humor, to get my karma from bad to neutral, since my first 2 posts were rated -1 and ever since I can't post that will get read, and my two other posts weren't offensive, so I deserve better). :-)
  • Some things I found (Score:5, Interesting)

    by baryon351 ( 626717 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:05PM (#5118811)
    I've come across quite a few older drives in machines that hadn't been cleaned out. One was an ancient Mac II which used to be used as a webserver, but was removed from that job in 1995, and had sat in a basement getting rustier and rustier. It was given to me in horrific condition, and the motherboard/PSU was toast, almost like it was washed through with saltwater. The HD looked a little better, and on firing it up in another machine, it clattered noisily, but still read most of the drive - on there was the website, last accessed 8 years ago. I copied that all off and archived it just because it was cool.

    Oddly, the website nowadays isn't all that different :).

    Another belonged to a rather fascinating lady who seemed to use her computer from 1994 when it was new, until 2002 when I came across it from an ebay sale. All of her writing (some published, some not), drafts, her academic work, and her photography was on there. She did quite a few nudes and not only had published work, but every photo taken in between used to create those images. Slightly giggleworthy, but really just rather tasteful nude photos.

    One other I was given, a compaq 486, belonged to an organiser of some of the behind the scenes work for the Sydney Olympics - it had names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of celebrities, politicians, and anyone involved in the marketing pre-games, along with correspondence to those people. A fun read but kind of boring - I didn't keep the addresses either.

    The biggest coincidence I came across was ordering a computer from ebay, from a town about 800km from me. it came to me with a HD full of various word documents - what a surprise to find it had originally been used as a wordprocessing machine in the same building I work in, and several years before. It came home :).

    Nothing amazingly exciting, just a few curious little moments.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:19PM (#5118892)
      I'm not trying to bash baryon, but really, is this the place to be discussing information gleaned from old hard drives?

      Every other poster has managed to stay within the confines of this discussion, which is clearly about Duplicate stories being posted to Slashdot.

      I don't think it's fair to them, or the rest of the readers, if this post doesn't get modded down to -1 Offtopic.

  • by PaKettle ( 196529 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:06PM (#5118817)
    Check out the photoshop [fark.com] that's going on over at Fark [fark.com]: unlikely Slashdot articles.
  • Again a story that has been posted a little while ago. I won't rant about reading your own website or getting decent editors... not this time.

    But I wouldn't be surprised if one of the factors for the attention BBC gives to this project is the fact that is has been on Slashdot.

    Nice circle :)
  • by M.C. Hampster ( 541262 ) <M...C...TheHampster@@@gmail...com> on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:09PM (#5118830) Journal

    There have to be 20 dupes about the fact that this is a dupe. Of course, I'm guessing this has already been pointed out...

    • Taco posts a dupe, and those that get in early pointing it out get Karma, those that point out the dupes pointing out the dupe get some Karma, and those who point out the dupes pointing out the dupes pointing out the dupes get some karma, but if you get into the pyramid too late, you get screwed with -1 Redundant.
  • by HomerNet ( 146137 ) <sov.columbia@gmai l . com> on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:10PM (#5118836)

    1.) All right allready! We now have established beyond a shadow of a doubt that yes, a similar story was posted earlier this week.


    2.) It amuses me that people seem to think that /. editors have so much time on their hands that all they have to do all day is read headline and forum posts. That's what moderators and metamoderators are for, and they may not catch every story that comes down the pike.


    3.) Perhaps the most enjoyable "data mining" find on an old hard drive for me was over 1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them. They now make up the bulk of my music library.

    • by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:40PM (#5119040)
      2.) It amuses me that people seem to think that /. editors have so much time on their hands that all they have to do all day is read headline and forum posts. That's what moderators and metamoderators are for, and they may not catch every story that comes down the pike.

      If deciding what story submissions get posted based on content and similarity to recent stories isn't an editor's job, I'd like to know what is.

      Your comment about that being what mods and meta-mods are for would be true on a site like k5, but until moderators can mod stories off the front page here, that's what the editors are supposed to be for.
    • 1000 songs in MP3 format. After deleting the ones that I didn't like, there were still nearly 950 of them.

      I can't help picturing you walking into a video dating service, watching 10 tapes, and after rejecting the ones you don't like you announce you'd like to date 9 and a half of them :)

      -
  • How about LANs? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by toddestan ( 632714 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:12PM (#5118847)
    I find it most interesting at places where lots of computers are hooked up to a network, like at a college dorm. It's amazing the clueless dolts that share their entire harddrive over the network. You can learn a lot by browsing someone's internet cache. Also, since Windows seems to share My Documents by default, you can read people's homework (usually boring as hell though). About the most interesting was the person sharing all of their instant messaging chat logs. Lets just say that person got around a lot... The only thing is that you have to be careful, these people who are that clueless usually have a ton of virii, so don't click on goatse.ch.vbs!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:13PM (#5118853)
    I know you don't care, but I was changing out a certain head priest's hard drive for a Catholic organization(Something to do with a Little Flower) in Chicago, and I was moving his documents and found a folder that was holding a few letters to an S&M house down in Springfield saying that he wanted some services and he was a single salesmen from Milwaukee...well he got the single part right.

    Not to make this too long, but the funny part is they got pretty explicate about what he was wanting, and when I asked him if he wanted me to scratch and reinstall windows on the hard drive before I moved it over to the convent where the head Mother was going to be using it, he told me no, and I just went and installed it on here desk....God only knows how that went over?
  • A simple script (Score:5, Informative)

    by Black Copter Control ( 464012 ) <samuel-local@bcgre e n . com> on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:18PM (#5118886) Homepage Journal
    dd if=/dev/urand bs=100k count=100 of=garbage
    while cat garbage garbage ; do true ; done | dd bs=100k of=/dev/hdaX

    You could put it on a floppy Linux distribution and sell it to windows users who want to wipe their disks .. $20 a pop!
    (or better yet -- a bootable CD business card so you could include the source).

    Just don't let your 5 year old nephew get hold of it -- or else!

    • dd if=/dev/urand bs=100k count=100 of=garbage

      should be

      dd if=/dev/urandom bs=100k count=100 of=garbage

      (I was sure that I'd fixed that)

    • Re:A simple script (Score:3, Informative)

      by droid_rage ( 535157 )
      Not quite that simple.
      Yeah, that would work for newer desktops, but OnTrack, which sells disk wiping software (the only one I know, since that's what we use), also has a decent collection of basic SCSI drivers on their disk. You can load other drivers from a floppy if yours isn't there.

      Incidentally, the US government requires triple-overwrite on any computers leaving government facilities, and for anything sensitive they wipe it, then drill holes through the disk. Yes, I know this for a fact. I have done IT work for a government site.
  • Yes, we've seen the story about the hard drives. Many times, in many different places.

    However, this part --

    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"
    is not a duplicate. I think the question would better fit into the Ask Slashdot [slashdot.org] section, but oh well ...

    Perhaps somebody was just trying to start up a discussion about things that have been left on harddrives, not about how many times we can call it a dup.

  • But it doesn't matter of course because I use crypto-loop for exactly these reasons.
  • by catwh0re ( 540371 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:25PM (#5118931)
    when digging through an old work hard drive other than finding the usual outdated business documents and porn. I also found someone's personal stash of sort of secret info files they were keeping tabs on everyone in the office, *cuts and pastes*:

    "Tuesday 8th of February 1997, Tony is pissing me off today, he's already taken 4 coffee breaks, sticking me with the rest of the work, note to self report to boss. Julie is looking rather sexy today, comment to her at lunch about lovely blouse."

    It got spicy here and there and read like a badly written journal, still it was great to read about the daily intricate moments that one of my ex collegues had felt.

  • by brejc8 ( 223089 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:26PM (#5118934) Homepage Journal
    Errr Id better not tell this one.
  • by IainHere ( 536270 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:26PM (#5118937)
    Think of it as an opportunity for even the dimmest of slashdotters to appear funny - go grabbing the funniest comments from the original story! For example:

    "Luckily for me, my Ebay'd hard drives are safe: I only sell broken ones."

    "Two MIT grad students bought used drives from eBay and secondhand computer stores.
    Don't I feel inferior. I've done the same with used HD's in the past and I only have a HS edumacation."

    "Your old HD is safe, I can get creditcard numbers faster on kazaa."

    "Was it Pete Townshend's drive?"

    "How do I destroy a HD? I just wait for my warranty to run out - it becomes unreadable shortly thereafter!"
  • by Gambit Thirty-Two ( 4665 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:26PM (#5118938)
    One time when I came home from work, there was a PC by the dumpster at our apartment complex. I brought it in to harvest it for parts (never can have enough screws), and i decided to boot it up first to see what it was. Low end pentium, like a 75mhz. 8megs of ram. Ran DOS and Win 3.11.

    Turned out the machine used to be a Kiosk machine at a deli counter at a local grocery store. There wasnt TOO much of interest on it, but there was a huge list of peoples meat and cheese orders.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    About 6 months ago, I was taking out the trash in my apartment when I noticed a computer case next to the dumpster. Being the pack rat I am, I grabbed that baby and haulled it up to my room. It was absolutly caked in smoke and dust, so after an hour of totally cleaning it, I was ready to fire it up. The system was a 166 P1 and was in perfect working order, dispite the dust bunnies. Windows 95 loaded up painfully slow, but I managed. And the wealth of crap I found on there, lemme tell ya.

    The first thing I found was an exchange of messages between the previous owner and a company that had shipped him a crate of mushrooms. Yes, mushrooms. Apperantly, customs has distroyed his first order and he wanted the company to ship a replacement. But it doesn't stop here.

    The second thing I found was a pile of emails between the previous owner and his ex-girlfriend. Wow were they at eachothers necks. Apperantly, the previous owner was your average college drunkard and basically rapped this girl. I won't go into the specifics of it, but man, it was like watching a train wreck. I couldn't stop from reading every last juicy detail.

    Anyway, that was about it... not CC# or anything like that, just sex and drugs.
  • From the hasn't-anyone-heard-off dept
  • Slashdotdotdotdotdotdot.
  • Before you sell a computer, wipe the damn hard drive! Don't just reformat - do a low-level reformat and have it overwritten with zeros. If you're really worried, use PGP to do it. Then re-install the system and whatever else belongs there.

    If you know somebody who's selling/giving away a computer, make sure they know that the Trash/Recycle Bin doesn't really delete anything.
  • Dupe filtering (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jensend ( 71114 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:36PM (#5119012)
    Slashdot ought to implement a dupe filtering system along the lines of the following: People indicate in their prefs whether or not they want to see dups (for the extra discussion). When a dupe is posted and an editor later recognizes it as a dupe, the editor flags it as a dupe and it no longer shows up on the pages of people who have asked not to see dupes.
    • This is a sensible idea. Mod parent up.
    • Could this include a feature to eliminate "Clueless dupes who post comments to such articles"? ;)

    • In addition, they should install a dupe comment rating system, so I can assign a -5 to any comment bitching about dupes.

      Thank you for at least offering something constructive, though, instead of just saying "Taco can't spell, I mean didn't check to see if it had been posted, already!"

      Also, to play the devil's advocate, I must suggest adding a meta-dupe-comment rating system be installed, so one can also assign -5 to any comment bitching about comments bitching about dupes.
    • by Alsee ( 515537 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @04:12PM (#5120498) Homepage
      dupe filtering system

      Oh wonderful (groan). The next day you'd have several thousand baffled people trying to figure out why the hell the front page is completely blank.

      -
  • C:\WINDOWS\MYDOCUME~1\ToRepost
    C:dir

    HDMINING.TXT
    CMDTACO.TXT
    CBYNEAL.TXT
    ASCIPR0N.TXT
    FLEXDISP.TXT
    MSSUXORS.TXT
    SDVERTSE.TXT
    IHATETRL.TXT
    OSXROCKS.TXT
    RPOSTALL.CGI
    SLASH.HTM

    VOLUME SLASDT
    20030023 bytes free 34789287 bytes used

    C:

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:37PM (#5119024)
    Okay, we've established this article is a dupe. But the original didn't have this juicy morsel:
    "What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?"
    Like many /. readers, I am considered the local "computer guy" that fixes the computers when things go wrong. One system I recently worked on was a throw-away by a local hospital. I was stunned and shocked when I went scouring the hundreds of .dbx and .dbf files, only to find that it still had on it medical records!

    Knowing this could cause legal trouble, I quickly got on the phone and called the hospital. They said that they thought the system was clean, and that I should destroy any data on the drive. I then called my lawyer. After a small consulting fee (about $60) he informed me that I shouldn't have anything to worry about, so long as I did as the hospital asked, and destroyed all copies of the records. And I did, and that was the first time I ever felt good about losing data!

    (Posting anonymously, in case any other slashdotters get any funny ideas... :)

  • Not to defend the Taco (ok, to defend the Taco) but if you'd read the damn article, you would see that it is a request for your experience.

    Sheesh, you'd think the 'nerds' would pay attention to the details. But then, you are not really nerds. Are you?

  • by PotatoHead ( 12771 ) <doug.opengeek@org> on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:43PM (#5119056) Homepage Journal
    in a dumpster.

    A friend went back to claim them, this is what he ended up with:

    2 HP Server class machines PIII 450Mhz good working condition once the cigarette ashes were removed.

    1 DLT Tape backup

    19 New tapes in wrapper and cleaning kit

    Cables and other accessories.

    The machines were used by a financial company. Everything worked and booted up. NT server loaded and ready....

    We shut them down and wiped everything. Pretty scary actually, who knows what was on those machines!

  • That's easy (Score:5, Funny)

    by Chocolate Teapot ( 639869 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:45PM (#5119067) Homepage Journal
    What's the strangest thing readers have found, or left, on a hard drive?
    Windows '95
  • by leek ( 579908 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:45PM (#5119070)
    This story is part of a striped disk array, which is why its content looks similar, but not identical, to the other stripe [slashdot.org], which was discovered a week ago.
  • Some dude was fired from our company a while back.

    When we sorted through his equipment, not only did he have volumes of she-male pr0n, but he had been subscribed to she-male pr0n emailing lists using his company email account.

    It certainly explained his freaky looking "girlfriend".
    :)

  • I very recently purchased a hard drive off of Ebay for a friend that had at least 12 modern games installed, all with cracks and no-CD patches applied. Jedi Knight 2, Quake 3, Unreal Tournament 2003, Civilization, you name it, this guy had it. We had tons of fun for a while (hell, I imaged the hard drive right away :-) )
    • And not just hard drives. Browsing around the company LAN, we find all sorts of things on peoples's shares. And once a couple of years back, my colleague and I discovered some persons of questionable parentage had gotten into one of our colocated servers and was using it as an FTP site for trading games. Our reaction was like this:

      Me: "Where did all the disk space go?"

      Co-worker: "And this new account?"

      Me: "Damn! I knew we should have replaced this POS(a 2 year old install)! It's been compomised!"

      Co-worker: "Here's where it went. They've got an FTP site up for trading games. It's taking up 30 gigs!"

      Me: "Bastards! .... Is there anything good in there?"

      Co-worker: "Actually.... yes..."

      Me: "OK. Shut that account out, let's prepare to redo the system. And maybe we should archive that. You know, for evidence...."

  • by bstadil ( 7110 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @12:56PM (#5119153) Homepage
    The strangest most surreal thing found so far is a copy of the same story on Slashdot.org [slashdot.org]from a few days ago.
  • Lots of good stuff.

    I picked up a half a dozen or so old Pentium computers for dirt at the Arthur Andersen asset auction in DC last year. You know, the guys who audited Enron.

    I figured they'd have removed the drives. Nope! Blanked them? Nope! In several cases, the PCs' former users had left only a few megs free on the 1.2 gig drives.

    Now, I wouldn't know an incriminating document if hit me in the ass. Nevertheless, if my company's books were audited by Arthur Andersen, I'd be pissed off that they didn't clear those drives.

  • by infolib ( 618234 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @01:14PM (#5119333)
    Secure Harddisk Eraser is a Linux floppy that overwrites the HD several times with different patterns. Just boot from the floppy, wait 60 seconds and the harddisk will start to erase.

    The homepage [linux-kurser.dk]

    Oh yes, I've posted on this before, but that doesn't seem to matter...
  • Well, here's what we do around these parts with old hard drives....take em up to the range and put a clip of .762 into each one. (or .223, depends on whether the AK or the AR15 is out that day)

    I promise you, you will NOT have to worry about someone getting your data after that.

    • Yup. We can't take old equipment to the range (they won't allow non-paper targets) but we can drive about an hour up north to Central Florida and open up a few ports with the Remington 700 in .223 or 22-250. I also have a couple Winchester Model 70s in .270 that are quite effective at remotely securing the drive.
  • Burglary Recovery! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by KC7GR ( 473279 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @02:19PM (#5119807) Homepage Journal
    Back in the late 90's, when I was still doing PC service work for folks, I had a pretty wild experience in terms of recovery. I ran into this cab driver at CompUSA who was in the process of picking up a whole bunch of power cords and other basic accessories. We got to talking, and he said he was new to computers, and had just gotten a whole bunch of hardware from the local swap meet.

    We talked a while longer, and he ended up agreeing to pay my hourly rate to look the machines over, clean them up, and wipe the drives so he could use 'em. What he had was a full-tower Pentium 166 (big stuff back then), and a smaller external drive that had a security key lock on it.

    So, I vacuum the system's guts (had a ton of dust-bunnies in there), reseat the memory, and fire it up. It boots into Win95. First thing I notice is a TON of very high-end graphics-manipulation and publishing software installed, including packages like Adobe PageMaker, a full version of Acrobat, PhotoShop, etc. There was also the (then) current version of Visual Basic and Visual C (both Enterprise-class editions).

    This set off some alarm bells in my head. The combined software on that system was worth at least as much as the hardware. I started digging a bit deeper. I found a couple of Word documents (yes, the system had a full version of MS Office and MS Exchange on it as well) with the name of a graphics-and-advertising company barely 30 miles away.

    I called said company, and got hold of the admin assistant for the programmer who's name was all over the system. Turns out that the entirety of what that cabbie had delivered to me had all been stolen in a burglary the same day it showed up at the swap meet!

    You can probably guess the rest. The cabbie, once he learned what was going on, and not wanting any trouble with the King County Sheriffs, agreed to just leave the equipment with me in return for anonymity. The system, as it turned out, belonged to one of their senior developer/programmers who, along with their system, had lost about seven years worth of intense work.

    The company involved was so delighted to get everything back intact (yep, every byte of that work was recovered) that they not only paid me for my time involved in cleaning the stuff up, but they also gave me a $50.00 certificate for one of the best restaurants in town. My wife and I had a nice dinner with that one.

    The moral of the story: Pay VERY close attention to what may be left on any hard drive or system you get, and follow your instincts if you're the least bit suspicious! You could end up saving someone a ton of grief and lost hours.

    • by TheTick ( 27208 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @03:21PM (#5120189) Homepage Journal

      The system, as it turned out, belonged to one of their senior developer/programmers who, along with their system, had lost about seven years worth of intense work.

      [...]

      The moral of the story: Pay VERY close attention to what may be left on any hard drive[...]You could end up saving someone a ton of grief and lost hours.

      It's an interesting story, I agree, but the real moral ought to be make backups! There's no excuse for losing years of work just because a box was stolen. Some negligent sysadmin should've been canned over that.

  • Can't happen in DoD (Score:4, Interesting)

    by AnalogDiehard ( 199128 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @02:44PM (#5119947)
    I did some software development for a Department of Defense project, all classified secret. Computer security is taken very seriously on those projects. No connection to the outside world whatsoever, portable media and devices are tightly controlled, and it's a PC roach motel; if you bring your desktop PC in the secured area, it won't come out. There were even strict policies on phone use, especially to the outside world.

    Whenever a PC changed hands, the IT folks did a complete 100% wipe on the hard drive before installing an image, but not before scanning the drive for security violations. I don't know what their disposition policy was, but it's a safe bet that dead media was definitely not going to be recovered.

  • Any drive I sell or put up on an auction, I make sure I do one or all of these things. Any of these will ensure the data can not be retreived from the drive.

    I drop it, on the floor, a few times.
    Open the unit up and pour cement/paint inside.
    Use a paperclip and touch random metal parts together
    Soak it in water for 30 minutes
    Put it in the microwave for 30 seconds
    Put it in water and microwave for 30 seconds
    Play football with it
    Attached it to your car muffler for a day or two
    Take a shower with it
    Take a bath with it
    Give it to a child, for a crib toy, for a week
    Drop it into the shitter while taking a dump!
    Use it as a freezz-bee
    Put it in the mover, for a few hours, at max


    I am sure you can think of more exciting way to ensure data cleaning. If so, please add to this list!!
  • by mattACK ( 90482 ) on Monday January 20, 2003 @04:27PM (#5120651) Homepage
    ...wiping the free space on a drive is built into the OS.

    cipher /w:[path]

    where [path]= any location on the drive in question.

    This tool doesn't delete files that are present, but simply clears space already marked as "empty". It was included to augment the functionality of EFS. If you encrypt a file, you don't want vestiges of the file from before you encrypted it lingering.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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