Erasing your Data

Erasing your data is called degaussing. Our degausser magnetically destroys all data on hard drives and tapes.

Erasure Verification

We provide a media erasure report complete with date, time, user ID, serial number, and erasure verification of each degauss cycle.

Best Practices:

Physical destruction of hard drives alone leaves data behind. Degaussing eliminates data on the disk platters.

Overwriting vs Degauss

Overwriting

Overwriting is a method where a random pattern of usually “1” and “0” is written to every part of the drive, frequently three times, to obliterate the underlying data.  The advantage of this method is the drive can be re-used.  The disadvantages are:  it takes a skilled operator to ensure the overwriting is done correctly; non-functioning sectors of the hard drive cannot be overwritten allowing data to remain on the drive; it takes a considerable amount of time-hours, and therefore electricity; and it is not regarded as failsafe, or permissible for the highest data security standards such as the NSA, CIA, or DoD.

Degaussing

Degaussing is the process of exposing the media to a strong magnetic field of sufficient strength to magnetically destroy the data.  The advantages of degaussing are:  a skilled operator is not required to operate a degausser; the magnetic field destroys the all data on the drive in approximately 1/10 of a second regardless of whether the drive is functioning or non-functioning, and degaussing is recognized by the NSA and DoD as an appropriate method of secure data destruction.  The disadvantage of degaussing is the hard drive cannot be re-used. After degaussing, the data on a degaussed hard drive simply no longer exists.

Secure and Compliant

Our system meets government and industry standards requiring complete erasure of sensitive data before disposal, including:

NIST SP 800-88r1
IRS 1075
CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act)
DoD (Emergency Destruction)
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation)
GLBA (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act)
HIPAA (Health Information Portability and Accountability Act)
PCI DSS 3.2 (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard)
PIPEDA (Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act)
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