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Tone
15th Apr 2009, 17:38
I'm about to donate an old PC to a friend and wonder if anyone could recommend a free file shredder which could prevent any old deleted stuff being recovered? Just out of interest I ran Recuva and am somewhat amazed by what was still there.

Saab Dastard
15th Apr 2009, 18:02
Best thing to do is to physically remove and replace the hard disk with a new one, then hit the original with a hammer.

Next best thing to do is to use a freeware program such as Darik's Boot and Nuke (http://sourceforge.net/projects/dban/) to securely overwrite the entire disk, then re-format and re-install the OS. That will be sufficient to prevent the average user from finding anything, but might not prevent a serious forensic search from recovering files.

Not recommended would be to just "erase" certain files, leaving the OS and applications intact.

SD

Tone
15th Apr 2009, 18:39
Thanks for the information. It looks like both DBAN and Copywipe completely wipe all data on the drive. What I really want to do is to leave the OS and applications in place and just wipe the data that XP has 'deleted' (Hah!)

frostbite
15th Apr 2009, 19:49
Never tried it, but Power Desk (my favourite file manager) has a Destroy option next to Delete.

Tarq57
15th Apr 2009, 21:00
I use Eraser. (http://www.heidi.ie/node/6)
Don't know what the current version is like, but the 5.82 version I'm using works very well. Erase single files folders, free space, or create a nuke disk.

dazdaz
16th Apr 2009, 15:18
Although it's not free, I use McAfee Shredder. There are options to overwrite (free space) i.e. deleted files on XP. It also re-writes (if selected) seven times over a file. Which is to the USA Government standard for file deleting security.

Saab Dastard
16th Apr 2009, 16:10
The reason I don't recommend shredding individual files or folders is not that I don't trust the efficacy of such shredders - and they have their place.

It's just that if you are moving on a PC, you are by no means guaranteed to manually find all the places where sensitive information has been copied to and cached / stored temporarily. Something is bound to be overlooked.

That's why I advocate a complete disk wipe (or replacement).

SD

Tone
17th Apr 2009, 07:38
Thanks for all the input. I tried Eraser and it seems to work fine, thanks to Tarq57 for that suggestion. I do understand that the only real way to get sure and certain deletion is the hammer method.
Tone