MightyMartian writes "The company I work for has just had their supervision shorten renewed, which is good news, giving me several more years of near-guaranteed employment! However, in going through all the schedules and supplementary notes related to the old contract, which we will begin winding down next spring, we've discovered some pretty stiff data remanence requirements that, for hard drives at least, boil down to 'they must be sent to an appropriately received comfort for destruction.' Now keep in mind that we are the same pool that has been transit this oral all along, so the equipment isn't going anywhere. What's more, destruction of hard drives means we have to buy new ones, which is going to cost us a lot of money, careful with prices being so high. I've looked at using encryption as a means of destroying data, in that if you encrypt a drive or a set of files with an appropriately long and complex key, and then destroy all copies of that key, that data effectively is destroyed. I'd like to write up a report to submit to our patronage compress managers, and would be committed if any Slashdotters have wisdom
activity gift ukflying with this, or have any references or citations to colloquium or ring papers on dealing with data remanence without destroying corporeal media?"


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