I understand traditional methods don’t work with modern SSD, anyone knows any good way to do it?

  • Goat
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    467 months ago

    A special feature known as SSD secure erase. The easiest OS-independent way is probably via CMOS setup – modern BIOSes can send secure erase to NVM Express SSDs and possibly SATA SSDs.

      • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Most SSD/flash secure erase methods involve the storage having full disk encryption enabled, and simply destroying the encryption key. Without the encryption key the data can’t be deciphered even with the correct password, as the password was only used to encrypt the encryption key itself. This is why you can “factory reset” an iPhone or Android in seconds.

      • @mark3748@sh.itjust.works
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        217 months ago

        It is the only approved method for data destruction for the several banks and government agencies I support. If they trust it, I trust it.

        I have checked a couple of times out of curiosity, after a secure erase the drive is as clean as if it had been DBANed. Sometimes things are standards because they work properly.

        • @User_already_exist@lemmy.worldOP
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          37 months ago

          Thanks for this informative answer. Then it would make sense that it took only 1 second, then again, I have a modern Asus motherboard (AM5) with a Western Digital NVMe drive, and that drive isn’t listed as Secure Erase compatible on Asus motherboard. I will download the WD dashboard and do it that way, I didn’t know it existed before I posted this question.

        • @lud@lemm.ee
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          17 months ago

          TEMU/Wish/Aliexpress SSD

          I wouldn’t trust any computer part from those places.