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  1. #21
    jghilino's Avatar
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    Buying Specialty Escrap of all kinds, resale grade computer parts

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    my method of choice, remove the board then have at it:




  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by BRASSCATCHER View Post
    Maybe a stupid question but want to make sure what I am doing is ok. I hit the hd with a ballpein cracking the alum case and breaking part of the platter. Then I take a chunk of the platter and throw in my alum bucket and then turn in the hd to my buyer. I do this so I am not losing too much weight from the hd. By doing this am I doing enough to ensure that the platter is made unreadable because of the missing piece? I don't get a large volume of hd's when I get towers and servers so this is the quickest way for me to ensure that the hd's are unreadable.
    There's NO stupid questions, those are just the easiest ones to answer ; ) In light of what's been said on this thread alone, I believe you should be relatively worry free. I've also read in indepth studies that using the hammer was more than enough. I have been through a LOT of computers, and drives over the last ten or 12 years, including ones from FBI, Homeland Security, Dept Commerce, Census etc, and never lost a moments sleep worrying about their data being retrieved or "stolen". The horror stories are most likely related to gross negligence on the part of the "victim" (or maybe just plain ignorance). I've have a NASA hard drive nearly ten years (it snuck past them inside a large unit, I didn't know it was a HD either until beginning to dismantle it), and this thing weighs 35 pounds! I've advertised it on both Ebay and Craigslist numerous times, but the shipping alone was prohibitive(if anyone had wanted data, and won't pay shipping, how will they spend thousands to retrieve it). Ohwelll! I almost believe for someone to connect with someone's important data, they'd need to stalk the original owner until they disposed of their computer, then wait until you removed it from their storage, then stalk you until you disposed of the HD, then stalk your buyer until, ohboy!! Why didn't they just follow the person to the ATM in the first place, and grab the receipt he tossed on the sidewalk as he was walking away??

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  4. #23
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    Well, Bear, some people are just paranoid. and i guess it only takes one time of being right to make a lifetime of paranoia worth it.

    Personally, i just landed a deal with my company for data destruction of a couple of hundred drives and they spent several weeks going back and forth with me over the exact methods and procedures of destruction, as well as the documentation. I even had to dismantle one today in front of 3 people to show them the process. It worked out, and now i got the deal
    We're the renegades of Junk!

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  6. #24
    wdaddy started this thread.
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    With the fine for lost data at least $1.5 million, yeah, it pays to be careful when dealing with patient data.

    It took me a year to land my latest hard drive contract and I work at the hospital I'm going to be doing this for. I have access to way more data then these drives will ever hold. I work in IT and directly with all the patient data, so they already trust me. I'm sure that helped them award me the contract.

  7. #25
    wdaddy started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by jghilino View Post
    arnt there companies out there that shred drives that would pay you for them or take them for free, they have to be making a killing on the scrap hard drive boards plus all the aluminum and stainless they generate? i would have a few guys tearing boards off and another one feeding the shredder
    They don't take anything for free. They charge $10 per drive to do this. I looked into one of these and would have not way to recoup the costs of $18,000 for a small model... then you have to find a buyer for your mixed drive scrap....

    I charge less, keep it local, and recycle all my waste locally.

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