How do you permanently remove things from your PC such as things you've looked at, important information that you don't want anyone to see, account numbers, etc. without formatting the HDD?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
The secure shredder is a tool to get finally rid of files, without any further possibilities of recovery.
Shredding is simple – drop some files from the explorer into the list (or add some using the context menu of the list), select the number of shreds, and click Chop it away.
Usage tracks that are in files will be shredded using this tool, too, using 5 passes.
The first 5 shreds are using pre-defined bit pattern that should make even hardware recovery impossible. Any further pass will use a random bit pattern that is changing every few Bytes.
Please notice: one pass is not enough to shred a file, as the heads of your hard disk won't hit the same track 100,00% of the time. There are small differences of a few µm that will allow pros to reconstruct even overwritten data. That is why multiple shreds are necessary, and why different patterns should be used.
Warning: This tool is designed to remove files so they can not be recovered again! If you use it, be aware of that!
You do not need to use this tool to remove spyware or usage tracks. Spybot-S&D will take care of shredding them on its own.
Disclaimer: I tried my best to finally shred every given to this tool. But I can't guarantee that files will be unrecoverably extinguished.
You can find the secure shredder tool by choosing Secure Shredder from the Tools section in the toolbar to the left.
First thing that comes to mind is system restore...i'll have to think of other optionsNJ-Buckeye said:on the flipside... what can I use to recover a file that was deviously deleted from sys and purged from Recycle Bin??
Were these files on an individual computer drive or a shared network drive? If it was a network drive I don't think system restore would be any good. Other than that I would do itNJ-Buckeye said:a fired employee deleted files that we need now
In that situation I would think you are safe if you clean out your history, temp internet files, and anything else along those lines. I doubt that your IT guys are going to try to bring back files that you erased. If you have IT Nazi's like that I would be more worried about the web server recording what webpages you are accessing.ScarletInMyVeins said:An employee here just got fired for having something on his PC and I want to make sure that there's nothing on my PC that is even questionable. For instance... sometimes I'll click on a link here and it'll lead to a website or a pic that the IT people here may not like and I want to make sure I don't get into trouble.
Files are on a standalone PC.. but will restore permit me to select specific files or will it restore EVERYTHING as to a specific date/time??Golferdow01 said:Were these files on an individual computer drive or a shared network drive? If it was a network drive I don't think system restore would be any good. Other than that I would do it
system restore will restore everythingNJ-Buckeye said:Files are on a standalone PC.. but will restore permit me to select specific files or will it restore EVERYTHING as to a specific date/time??