this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2025
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Privacy
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Also: back in the day, you could wipe a drive with GNU Shred or just "dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hda". SSDs and NVMe drives have logic about where and what to overwrite that makes this less effective, leading to the possibility of data recovery from old drives. If the data is always encrypted at rest and the key is elsewhere (not on the drive, in a yubikey or TPM chip or your head), then the data is not recoverable.
From what I understand, some modern drives effectively encrypt everything at rest, but have the key on file internally so it decrypts transparently. This allows for a fast "wipe" where it just destroys the key instead of having to overwrite terabytes.
that presumes trust in the drive manufacturer and their firmware