• ploot
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    7 hours ago

    What are the chances the hard drive would still be readable, I wonder?

    And keep backups, folks.

    • Gerudo@lemm.ee
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      1 hour ago

      You’d be surprised what’s recoverable, especially if it’s an HDD.

      There was a recovery service I could send customer drives to that could recover a drive in a fire, flood, buried, shattered etc. The question was, how much did you want to pay for the service. One quote came back over 75k.

    • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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      7 hours ago

      the only reason I’m not this guy is that my hard drive was landfill long before it arrived at the dump and was exposed to the elements for over a decade.

      also my wallet was encrypted and there is no way in fuck I’m remembering the longest password I ever used.

      I mined on CPU so what I lost was then pennies that currently amount to hundreds of billions so if there was even the smallest chance it could be recovered I’d be in this headline.

      • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Also a cpu miner and it was in the hundredths of a cent per coin when I did it. It sucks but that drive is long gone and not worth it to fret over. It was also in the hundreds of millions at todays cost

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      It depends how it was stored. If it is just raw dogging the garbage pile? The odds get very low but, theoretically, it is just a matter of very carefully the drive before booting it up. Think “data forensics”

      If it was stored in a plastic bag or box? Then it is about as safe as a drive in your closet that you haven’t spun up in over a decade.

      • Screamium@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        It gets compacted in the garbage truck and compacted some more at the landfill. I think the odds are slim it could be found in one piece

        • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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          4 hours ago

          garbage truck compacting isn’t really that much, check out what it looks like when they dump it. lots of stuff doesn’t get exposed.

          The drive would have been fed to the incinerator where I live. We don’t use a dump, we have a huge waste to power transfer station.

          • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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            3 hours ago

            Compacting at a landfill however ….

            Dumped out of the truck into probably another sorting area where machinery pushes through it potentially prying out large salvage pieces for scrap, or destructively breaking it apart by driving through and over it.

            Over, and over, and over, and over.

      • HexadecimalSky@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        a surprising ammount data can be gotten off surprisingly damaged drives, there is always the possibility, thats why it took a delte/write/delete/write process, a rare earth magnet, 3 guys, a sledge hammer, and a industrial shredder to throw away a hard drive in the army.