There are plenty of reasons to have this... most of them involve storing sensitive data and having to make absolutely sure it's erased before you decommission a drive. You'd be glad if a company that stores your credit card info were to use these when they get rid of drives.
This is something anyone with general electronic knowledge can do. All it is a short burst of 12 volt. But what if an idiot accidentally hits the red button.
I'm assuming the final model won't have the buttons permanently attached... it will probably be something you have to hook up yourself either when you're building it (if you want it there and waiting) or when you want to wipe/destroy the drive.
As long as the green button and red button use different connectors. Would be too easy to swap them accidentally and suddenly the green button lets out all the smoke.
Out of curiosity, does something like this exist for HDDs?
Sure, it's called a drill press... or thermite. The way this works is by overvolting the individual chips causing them to physically burn out. Overvolting a standard HDD would probably just fry the circuitry and/or motor leaving the data intact.
I've never seen a self-destroying HDD. Thus why people have done things like building thermite packed cases... well, also it's just cool to see a computer go up in a thermite fire.
I'm not giving it any grief. I think it's a neat idea albeit for a very niche market.
I understand that much, but there's currently no HDD that will self-destroy the platters?
For as much grief as everyone's giving it, I see a smart product exploiting a niche market.
http://www.deadondemand.com/products/enhancedhdd/ light on details though. I agree that it is a niche product for niche market and kinda chuckled at the military or CP generalization, since I see that being a flag for the CP programs now.
To be fair, there are a few times where I eventually just am so fed up with a computer part that when I replace it, it's worth more to my mental sanity to destroy it than it is to sell it. So...I can't knock the big red "die bitch" button. Maybe it should just have a cover or confirmation.
For a spinning disk, you'd have to find some way to crash the heads while maintaining motion on the platter. IIRC, this would be almost impossible to do intentionally, as a head crash is generally part of another physical failure, and simple "remove from case and smash with something heavy" operations tend to be much quicker and more effective.
They need retinal scans and voice activation and dual switches requiring unique keys and a randomized encrypted key only accessible from a satellite orbiting the moon.
Otherwise some random broom handle might randomly fall on the doomsday switch and then all your data is BOOOOMMMMMM!
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midga"There's so much hot dog in Rome" ~digi(> ^.(> O_o)>Icrontian
It'd be fairly trivial to replace the button with a keyed switch.
They should have gotten who speaks proper English to make the video. It's great for destroying data but what if you press the red button and then think "OH WAIT THERE'S ONE MORE THING I NEED TO SAVE FROM THIS DRIVE!!!!! AAAAHHHHHHH!!!! ?
I wonder how many insurance claims and lawsuits would follow should this product become available to the common, less computer-savvy user.
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midga"There's so much hot dog in Rome" ~digi(> ^.(> O_o)>Icrontian
I wonder how many insurance claims and lawsuits would follow should this product become available to the common, less computer-savvy user.
I would hope they would make it obnoxiously clear that
IF (RED_BUTTON == 1) THEN { YourDataExists = 0; ThisDriveIntact = 0; PossibilityForRepairOrRecovery = 0; }
Lawsuits might ensue, but there would be little ground for them to stand on. That is, of course, assuming there's no chance of the button accidentally pressing itself...
Comments
Right until somebody says "hey, go ahead and wipe that for reinstall" and they press the wrong button 7,500km from the nearest Microcenter.
But what if an idiot accidentally hits the red button.
Yeah, if you're using this, you're either fighting bad guys, or they're coming for you.
For as much grief as everyone's giving it, I see a smart product exploiting a niche market.
I'm not giving it any grief. I think it's a neat idea albeit for a very niche market.
Otherwise some random broom handle might randomly fall on the doomsday switch and then all your data is BOOOOMMMMMM!
IF (RED_BUTTON == 1) THEN
{
YourDataExists = 0;
ThisDriveIntact = 0;
PossibilityForRepairOrRecovery = 0;
}
Lawsuits might ensue, but there would be little ground for them to stand on. That is, of course, assuming there's no chance of the button accidentally pressing itself...