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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 10:07 AM
  #11  
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whats the big deal? just use ERP wich you can find on any P2p sharing program. Easy recovery pro disk can restore files deleted 9 times back. and recover lost partitions. If ya need a copy just PM me
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 11:11 AM
  #12  
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Fuxor.
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 11:41 AM
  #13  
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that must suck!!
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 11:42 AM
  #14  
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Originally Posted by Kabooki
whats the big deal? just use ERP wich you can find on any P2p sharing program. Easy recovery pro disk can restore files deleted 9 times back. and recover lost partitions. If ya need a copy just PM me
discuss more about said program!! im interested in case I do a fook up like that h:
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 12:58 PM
  #15  
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When you delete files nowadays, you aren't really erasing the sector and replacing it with a new one. You're just erasing the table of contents entry for that sector, so that your computer thinks it's empty and can "write over" that sector later on down the road.

All the program does is ignore the table of contents and searches the drive itself for the true data on it. Most of the time, even after a format, the data is still actually on the drive itself and software such as ERP can read that drive (rather than reading the Table of Contents like Operating Systems do) and "recover" the data. It then writes a new "Table of Contents" so you can see the data in your operating system and all is happy.

That's why a lot of people recommend low level formatting to truely destroy the data on the drive itself, rather than just erasing the table of contents; but in reality, even a low level format doesn't get rid of all of your data. It's still recoverable, as well.
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 01:00 PM
  #16  
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Originally Posted by antarius
When you delete files nowadays, you aren't really erasing the sector and replacing it with a new one. You're just erasing the table of contents entry for that sector, so that your computer thinks it's empty and can "write over" that sector later on down the road.

All the program does is ignore the table of contents and searches the drive itself for the true data on it. Most of the time, even after a format, the data is still actually on the drive itself and software such as ERP can read that drive (rather than reading the Table of Contents like Operating Systems do) and "recover" the data. It then writes a new "Table of Contents" so you can see the data in your operating system and all is happy.

That's why a lot of people recommend low level formatting to truely destroy the data on the drive itself, rather than just erasing the table of contents; but in reality, even a low level format doesn't get rid of all of your data. It's still recoverable, as well.
IIIIIIIIIIntersting
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 01:12 PM
  #17  
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Originally Posted by DakarM
i've done that... but with umm certain video files :rick:
gymnast tapes? :rick:
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 01:32 PM
  #18  
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Originally Posted by antarius
That's why a lot of people recommend low level formatting to truely destroy the data on the drive itself, rather than just erasing the table of contents; but in reality, even a low level format doesn't get rid of all of your data. It's still recoverable, as well.

Which is why if you're really paranoid you make/get programs which repeatedly write random data on top of whatever you want gone.


There's a couple 'oh shit the FBI is at the door' programs floating around the net.
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 01:37 PM
  #19  
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Originally Posted by qtiger
Which is why if you're really paranoid you make/get programs which repeatedly write random data on top of whatever you want gone.


There's a couple 'oh shit the FBI is at the door' programs floating around the net.
Exactly, they make programs that do a true format and it does exactly what you said. It just writes and rewrites a block of data like a thousand times and then deletes the table of contents, then does a low level format.

They're pretty unecessary for 99.9999999999999999999999999999% of the worlds population though, methinks.
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Old Oct 21, 2004 | 01:56 PM
  #20  
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Originally Posted by Derek
gymnast tapes? :rick:

don't you mean gymnasty tapes
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