this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
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Try mounting them. What is the dd command you’re using?
Now, depending on your threat model maybe a drill and a sledgehammer will be enough. If your threat model is rather high and it is really sensitive data, well you’ll have to spend that money if you can’t get zeros written.
I am a private person without any state or corporate secrets in hand. I do not do online banking.
My threat model I believe is limited to random drive-by actors.
I was hoping to be able to provide these drives to others to use, the screwdriver and hammer will render them into E-waste. But on that issue, once the platter assembly is disassembled and the platers are separated and mixed up the data on them is probably not recoverable? With the given that each drive has multiple platters.
A few gigs of zeroes will prevent random drive-bys. At that point the partition and filesystem table of at least the first partition is overwritten and you "can" recover files off it but you'll be missing filenames and at least half the files will be corrupt due to fragmentation losing track of which files are where.
I agree with Ono that shred is a good tool for this. If you don't want to use that, try increasing the block size to at least 1M if not 16M to reduce the overhead.
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdf bs=512 status=progress
Yeah. That should do it. There is also a shred tool you could try.
sudo shred -vfz /dev/sdf
You can also write a zero file to see if the drive is useable. That won’t erase what’s on it, but it will write all free space. If you mount the drive and delete everything on it, a zero file will in theory write zeros to the whole drive.
mount /dev/sdf /media dd if=/dev/zero of=/media/zerofile.tmp
I have a similar threat model. If the disks are indeed bad then a nice sledge and a trip to an e-cycle location should do it.