One of my external hard drives (14tb WD) started making weird “purring/scratching” noises lately. Luckily, I have it cloned on another larger 18tb drive. How does hard drive warranty work, should this guy fail? I suppose you send it back to them for replacement, but how can you trust them with whatever data is on your failed drive, if somehow they can still access it? I’m sure techs have better to do than just copy everyone’s stuff, but even out of principle, I’m concerned.

  • Celcius_87@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Has anyone ever heard of something bad coming from techs at a hard drive company that went through the contents of a returned drive and then took malicious actions? If they fix a drive and decide to resell it, do they zero out or reformat the drive? (Assuming you deleted the data from the drive and deleted the partition but didn’t do the whole “spend hours zeroing out the drive”)

  • essell@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    You’re right to be concerned, so many stories out there of techs discovering data on phones, laptops, hard drives, etc.

    If the drive is still working, fully wipe the data, there’s a variety of shredders and secure delete options out there, depending on what platform you’re running it with.

  • binaryriot@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    It’s a good idea to keep your important data where privacy matters separate from all the other stuff you collect. E.g. keep your documents and private photos and their backups on separate (smaller, cheaper to replace) devices. In worst case you can sacrifice.

    Keep the less important data that needs all the space (erm. those Linux ISOs) on the larger expensive disks. If you send those in, in case a replacement is required, then it probably won’t matter too much if someone must snoop over it (unless it’s too much of the dirty Linux ISOs) :)

    Aka have clear device-level separations between any sort of media collections and your critical data.

  • CyberbrainGaming@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Zero or scramble it or don’t send it.

    If you had the drive encrypted to begin with, then it doesn’t really matter.