Menu
DoYourData Super Eraser adalah software yang bisa memungkinkan anda menghapus file dan folder secara permanen tanpa meninggalkan jejak sampah bahkan mampu wipe hard drive anda secara total. Software ini berukuran kecil tetapi memiliki fitur yang sangat bermanfaat untuk mengatasi file-file yang sulit dihapus. Download Now. Do Your Data Recovery Free. Best free Mac data recovery software to recover lost data. DoYourData Super Eraser. Permanently and securely erase data from Mac hard drive or storage.
![]()
DoYourData Super Eraser is the NO.1 data erasure software that can permanently erase or wipe data from hard drive or storage device like USB drive, SD card, Memory card, external hard disk etc. If you want to completely and permanently erase unwanted files or sensitive data on your hard drive or storage device, Super Eraser is your best choice.Super Eraser will erase the files, folders as you want. After erasure, your data will be lost forever. So please think carefully before you decide to erase a file. The erased data can't be recovered by any data recovery software or any data recovery service method. When you want to erase some files or folders, you don't need to wipe the whole data. Just select the files or folders you want to erase.
Super Erase will help you permanently erase those selected files or folders.Before you sell your old computer, withdraw from a public PC, you'd better permanently erase your private files, folders to keep yourself from leakage of personal data. Super Erase can help you do this job. It will permanently erase files or folders from hard drive or storage media.It supports to erase data in FAT 12/16/32, exFAT, NTFS, NTFS 5, ext 2, ext 3 file system. Super Eraser is fully compatible with Windows 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista, XP, 2000 and Windows Server 2012, 2008, 2003.Product homepage:Company homepage:Giveaway limitations:The software must be activated during the giveaway period.
No free updates.
#12I do not use eraser software, it is to harsh on the HD by overwriting same zeros or ones over and over in the same places.Delete the files you want destroyed, do a defragmentation with compact option and then copy few DVD movies to the hard drive. There will be no trace of the deleted files ever and no harm done to the HD. You can then delete the movies if you need the space.How I know this, I challenged a hacker to retrieve the delete files and after a month of trying even using HEX editors, there were no traces of the deleted files. I do not use eraser software, it is to harsh on the HD by overwriting same zeros or ones over and over in the same places.Delete the files you want destroyed, do a defragmentation with compact option and then copy few DVD movies to the hard drive. There will be no trace of the deleted files ever and no harm done to the HD. You can then delete the movies if you need the space.How I know this, I challenged a hacker to retrieve the delete files and after a month of trying even using HEX editors, there were no traces of the deleted files. Borg, when you defragment data only data that is over written is the area where the fragmented source data ends up, the location of the source data further up the surface of the drive is still there.
Open for all to see. Now that could be program or OS binary files or it could be private personal data or previously deleted data. It is NOT harsh in any way for magentic media for it to be overwritten! It is designed to be overwritten! In fact it is good for hard drives to periodically written to, to refresh the magnetised paterns on the disks! Defragmentaion just makes it impossible for undelete tools to easily recover complete files because of the re-organisation of the files on the disk surface but areas unwritten remain and the data still exists there.
You need to defragment then wipe free space and cluster tips.Or just wipe clear space and cluster tips LOL. Borg, when you defragment data only data that is over written is the area where the fragmented source data ends up, the location of the source data further up the surface of the drive is still there. Open for all to see. Now that could be program or OS binary files or it could be private personal data or previously deleted data. It is NOT harsh in any way for magentic media for it to be overwritten! It is designed to be overwritten! In fact it is good for hard drives to periodically written to, to refresh the magnetised paterns on the disks!
![]()
Defragmentaion just makes it impossible for undelete tools to easily recover complete files because of the re-organisation of the files on the disk surface but areas unwritten remain and the data still exists there. You need to defragment then wipe free space and cluster tips.Or just wipe clear space and cluster tips LOL. Borg,Your hacker friend shouldn't give up his day job, I tried what you said you and your hacker say you've done and was able to recover files using forensic software. The only way you could prevent any files deleted using your method would be to encrypt them first, so that any recovered files would be worthless, your method is flawed in many ways and very time consuming. In fairness to your hacker, I work in computer security and my recovery tools are industrial strength, not normally available to the general public which probably gave me a bit of an edge. Interesting comment though.
Borg,Your hacker friend shouldn't give up his day job, I tried what you said you and your hacker say you've done and was able to recover files using forensic software. The only way you could prevent any files deleted using your method would be to encrypt them first, so that any recovered files would be worthless, your method is flawed in many ways and very time consuming. In fairness to your hacker, I work in computer security and my recovery tools are industrial strength, not normally available to the general public which probably gave me a bit of an edge. Interesting comment though. Maria, DVD files are not magic, again that only potentially erases part of the hard drive surface the rest remains if fragmented files parts were in the last 80% of the drive surface and delete them, the data remains in the last 80% of the drive. Defragment the drive and any remaining fragmented files will be moved towards the front of the drive and when you copy over with a DVD VOB file it will normally use the first unallocated blocks and completely miss the defragmented data blocks previous locations and the deleted data remaining in the last 80% of the drive I know as I am aware what defragmentation does and what writing a small file like a 1GB DVD VOB file does. You need to write many coppies of the VOB file to fill up all the unallocated space and even then some data could leak in cluster tip slack space.
That is why a dedicated tool like Heidi.ie Eraser will do that and wipe cluster tips. No need to shuffle files about with a defrag and part wipe part of the HD surface redundantly copying VOB files then deleting them leaving evidence of pirate movie trading activities on the HD. (deleted riiped DVD files)Try using a real defragmenter and not the GUI-less microsoft one so you can see where a files data is scattered around a drive then delete/defrag and copy your VOB files and notice that nothing written to the clusters that had data in prior to the deletion and defragmentation. Then use something like HxD to load the raw HD contents and look at the untouched clusters and there is the original data.I suggest both you and Borg don't set yourself up as profesional data storage device sanitisers as your methods leave data retrievable using very basic forensic methods. Maria, DVD files are not magic, again that only potentially erases part of the hard drive surface the rest remains if fragmented files parts were in the last 80% of the drive surface and delete them, the data remains in the last 80% of the drive. Defragment the drive and any remaining fragmented files will be moved towards the front of the drive and when you copy over with a DVD VOB file it will normally use the first unallocated blocks and completely miss the defragmented data blocks previous locations and the deleted data remaining in the last 80% of the drive I know as I am aware what defragmentation does and what writing a small file like a 1GB DVD VOB file does.
You need to write many coppies of the VOB file to fill up all the unallocated space and even then some data could leak in cluster tip slack space. That is why a dedicated tool like Heidi.ie Eraser will do that and wipe cluster tips. No need to shuffle files about with a defrag and part wipe part of the HD surface redundantly copying VOB files then deleting them leaving evidence of pirate movie trading activities on the HD. (deleted riiped DVD files)Try using a real defragmenter and not the GUI-less microsoft one so you can see where a files data is scattered around a drive then delete/defrag and copy your VOB files and notice that nothing written to the clusters that had data in prior to the deletion and defragmentation. Then use something like HxD to load the raw HD contents and look at the untouched clusters and there is the original data.I suggest both you and Borg don't set yourself up as profesional data storage device sanitisers as your methods leave data retrievable using very basic forensic methods.
#7Down from a retail sticker of $39 when offered in April this year to $14.50 now but it's still unclear as to what this commercial software does that's more effective / efficient than, for example, Piriform's long-established freeware, CCleaner.DoYourData Super Eraser 4.0 offers selective erasure of files and folders, of hard drives, and the wiping of free space. CCleaner / Options / Settings offers selective erasure of files and folders using 3, 7 and a pointlessly paranoid 35 over-writes, as well as cluster tips and alternate data streams wipes. Wipe Free Space is another CCleaner option.If this software has a Unique Selling Point - i.e., that Super Eraser 4.0 safely out-performs all the many freeware erasers already in existence as stand-alone apps or as part of computer 'optimization suites' - then the developer would serve its own best interest by making that clear. Down from a retail sticker of $39 when offered in April this year to $14.50 now but it's still unclear as to what this commercial software does that's more effective / efficient than, for example, Piriform's long-established freeware, CCleaner.DoYourData Super Eraser 4.0 offers selective erasure of files and folders, of hard drives, and the wiping of free space.
CCleaner / Options / Settings offers selective erasure of files and folders using 3, 7 and a pointlessly paranoid 35 over-writes, as well as cluster tips and alternate data streams wipes. Wipe Free Space is another CCleaner option.If this software has a Unique Selling Point - i.e., that Super Eraser 4.0 safely out-performs all the many freeware erasers already in existence as stand-alone apps or as part of computer 'optimization suites' - then the developer would serve its own best interest by making that clear. MikeR,C-Cleaner does not erase individual files or folders, and that's one of its main drawbacks, as it would be a natural thing for it to do. It erases some pre-determined files and folders created by Windows, and specific application software, which may contain identifying personal information while not being necessary for computer operation.
It also erases free space on a disk or partition, or the whole partition for that matter.There is no way in C-Cleaner, for instance, to select a Word document you have created, and erase it securely.It is also worth noting that no software can boast of securely erasing individual files or folders with absolute certainty. There are many cases in which parts of the file, or copies of it, would still remain on the disk (and therefore be susceptible to forensic attack), because the erasing software does not know where they might be.The only way to be sure that sensitive information is erased is to erase the whole partition or disk, or to erase the free space on that partition or disk. Or to lose the password of an encrypted volume.So, although using a piece of software such as this one immediately after creating a file might give some level of reassurance, there is an element of snake oil associated with all programs which pretend to securely erase individual documents created by the user. MikeR,C-Cleaner does not erase individual files or folders, and that's one of its main drawbacks, as it would be a natural thing for it to do. It erases some pre-determined files and folders created by Windows, and specific application software, which may contain identifying personal information while not being necessary for computer operation. It also erases free space on a disk or partition, or the whole partition for that matter.There is no way in C-Cleaner, for instance, to select a Word document you have created, and erase it securely.It is also worth noting that no software can boast of securely erasing individual files or folders with absolute certainty. There are many cases in which parts of the file, or copies of it, would still remain on the disk (and therefore be susceptible to forensic attack), because the erasing software does not know where they might be.The only way to be sure that sensitive information is erased is to erase the whole partition or disk, or to erase the free space on that partition or disk.
Or to lose the password of an encrypted volume.So, although using a piece of software such as this one immediately after creating a file might give some level of reassurance, there is an element of snake oil associated with all programs which pretend to securely erase individual documents created by the user. Steffo, that's not the ONLY way, but generally speaking it is almost the quickest way to make it difficult to retrieve data. But not always impossible unless the platters are microscopically shredded so no data segments could be retrieved. In which case it'll probably take significant time to shred a drive that far. On modern drives one overwrite of random data followed by numerous holes drilled through the platters should prevent labratory condition data recovery for the forseable future with drives that use perpendicular recording techniques. But single pass random data on same perpendicular recorded drive is the modern gold standard for drive sanitation for subsiquent re-use provided no sectors have ever been remapped since the faulty sectors that were taken out of use have become inaccessible by the firmware and not overwritable so could contain private data. Old fashioned low capacity drives still need multiple passes of random data to sanitise but none need the 35 pass method as most of the recording methods those 35 passes were designed to disrupt have not been in use for several decades!
Steffo, that's not the ONLY way, but generally speaking it is almost the quickest way to make it difficult to retrieve data. But not always impossible unless the platters are microscopically shredded so no data segments could be retrieved. In which case it'll probably take significant time to shred a drive that far. On modern drives one overwrite of random data followed by numerous holes drilled through the platters should prevent labratory condition data recovery for the forseable future with drives that use perpendicular recording techniques. But single pass random data on same perpendicular recorded drive is the modern gold standard for drive sanitation for subsiquent re-use provided no sectors have ever been remapped since the faulty sectors that were taken out of use have become inaccessible by the firmware and not overwritable so could contain private data. Old fashioned low capacity drives still need multiple passes of random data to sanitise but none need the 35 pass method as most of the recording methods those 35 passes were designed to disrupt have not been in use for several decades!. #1Nice website, lots of nice generic pictures of people, however, nothing about the company location.After a lot of searching I found some minimal location detailsI know some people here aren't really that bothered about where a company is from (so what laws govern it) as the software is free, but for those that are interested -Company: DoYourData SoftwareAddress: Shenzhen, Guandong, ChinaIt always bothers me if a commercial company makes no effort to tell basic details us about themselves and is a contributory factor in what I choose to install on my systems.
Nice website, lots of nice generic pictures of people, however, nothing about the company location.After a lot of searching I found some minimal location detailsknow some people here aren't really that bothered about where a company is from (so what laws govern it) as the software is free, but for those that are interested -Company: DoYourData SoftwareAddress: Shenzhen, Guandong, ChinaIt always bothers me if a commercial company makes no effort to tell basic details us about themselves and is a contributory factor in what I choose to install on my systems.
![]() Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |