Article Friendly article publishing script homepage.
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 42      
Categories

Accessories
All
Arts
Business
Cars and Trucks
CGI
Coding Sites
Computers
Cooking
Crafts
Current Affairs
Databases
Entertainment
Film
Finances
Gardening
Healthy Living
Holidays
Home
Internet
Medical
Men Only
Motorcyles
Our Pets
Outdoors
Relationships
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Staying Fit
Technology
Travel
Web Design
Weddings
Women Only
Writing
 
Stats
Total Articles: 439308
Total Authors: 73528
Total Downloads: 3382408


Newest Member
Diedre Turla

 


   

Recycling PC Hardware - Good Intentions Turn Risky



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.alltimeinfo.com/rss.php?rss=32
By : li baocai    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-03-15 23:13:19
How has your computer been treating you these days? Does it take you over an hour to download one song? Does it crash every time you have more than 3 programs open? Is that single USB port a dead give-away to how ancient your computer actually is?

Isn't it time to throw out that piece of junk or donate it? The answer is yes, but be cautious. Your quest to finding a new Pentium dual-core processor with 2gigs of RAM and a terabyte of hard drive space, may lead you to overlook one crucial detail...just how much your old computer knows about you?

Behind the Screens - What your Computer Knows About You and Your Business

Computers are an enigma to most users. The average person knows how to create, open, save, and delete a document. However, what most people don't know is that saving a document will save it for eternity, and deleting it will not actually delete it. In fact, it has only deleted the document from visibility; out of sight and out of mind, but not out of the hard drive. The history of the document remains intact and can be used to recover it in full, even after deleting the file from the recycle bin, or conducting a full system reformat.

Without the proper tools to overwrite or encrypt the data on your computer, you open yourself up to problems that arise from one generous act of recycling an old computer. According to a study conducted by Edith Cowan University, individuals and organizations alike are taking huge risks by recycling or disposing their old computer hardware parts without making sure the data stored is completely erased.

What's At Risk?

More than 300 random hardware parts from Australia, UK, North America, and Germany, were randomly purchased and used to extract data. A bevy of sensitive information was found on those machines like "payroll information, mobile telephone numbers, copies of invoices, employee names and photos, IP addresses, network information, illicit audio and video files, and financial details including bank and credit card account [information]."(1) Imagine how detrimental this could be for a company if this information got into the wrong hands!

Tips To Secure Your Hardware Donation

Well-intended computer users are oblivious to the dangers that come from improper disposal of computer hardware. It's imperative that the average computer person understands how to prevent these dangers. Here are a few tips on securing and erasing data before you donate:

* Demagnetize the hard-drive with a Type I or Type II "degausser tool". This is generally known as "erasure". The process changes the magnetic alignment of your data so that its magnetic domain points elsewhere, making your data indecipherable; similar to how you would dupe a compass.
* Using a disk sanitizer such as Disk Wipe, which will overwrite your original data with "gibberish" so it, too, will become indecipherable.
* Encrypt files with software that provides strong encryption to protect sensitive data, including spreadsheets, word docs, and email messages and attachments

Protecting your Donation, applying Anti-Theft Measures

Compared to the other solutions, encryption is a more effective and flexible method of protecting documents on your hard-drive. Anti-theft measures like encryption can actually safeguard data while a computer is still in use, ensuring that the data is both accessible (to those authorized) and protected at the same time. If a computer gets donated without thoroughly demagnetizing or sanitizing, encryption adds a security buffer. This ensures that the person or organization taking your old machine doesn't get any bonus donations of personal or sensitive information.

Smart Stewardship

Our society has reached a climax never before achieved in the history of technological advancement. This should imply a heightened understanding of proper care, use and disposal of such technologies. If you're still itching to get that new computer and discard the old, just remember that there are many things your old computer knows about you. Make sure you know just as much about your old machine and what can result from not securing or cleaning data off of it. Your charitable donation shouldn't result in years of chasing your reputation or cleaning up your credit.
Author Resource:- PC Gaming Hardware is a website that is commitment to promote computer pc hardware, PC memory, PC peripherals

Distributed by ContentCrooner.com
Article From All Time Info Articles

Related Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
Rate This Article
Vote to see the results!

Do you like this article?
  • Yes.
  • Not Sure.
  • No.
New Members
select
Sign up
select
learn more
Affiliate Sign in
Affiliate Sign In
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

Purchase this software

 

Powered By: Article Directory AlltimeInfo SiteMap