Question If I remove my laptop hard drive, am I safe?

joe23

Distinguished
Apr 14, 2011
30
1
18,545
I have an old laptop that isn't working anymore. I want to sell it for parts.
But I have quite a bit of naughty stuff on my laptop that I wouldn't want anyone
to see or find out about cuz it's embarrassing. So as long as I remove my hard drive
and any memory cards, and then sell the laptop as is, there is no way for the next owner
to find any records or data about my naughty files? Hehe. I'm like 99.9% sure I'm correct
but I just wanted to make sure. Who knows if the laptop has some built-in internal memory
that stores some thumbnails or files that I am not aware about lol.
 
I have an old laptop that isn't working anymore. I want to sell it for parts.
But I have quite a bit of naughty stuff on my laptop that I wouldn't want anyone
to see or find out about cuz it's embarrassing. So as long as I remove my hard drive
and any memory cards, and then sell the laptop as is, there is no way for the next owner
to find any records or data about my naughty files? Hehe. I'm like 99.9% sure I'm correct
but I just wanted to make sure. Who knows if the laptop has some built-in internal memory
that stores some thumbnails or files that I am not aware about lol.
Drill a hole or reasonable facsimile, kill the drive. Not much left in the laptop to worry about. Just kill the HDD, then your good to go.
Okay whips & Jingles?
 
  • Like
Reactions: joe23
That would depend on whether your laptop has any internal modules for Intel Turbo Memory, Smart Response Technology or Optane Memory, ExpressCache or ReadyCache, or even Microsoft ReadyBoost--which at least encrypts the cached data using AES-128 because it's normally used with removable cards.

AES-128 should be pretty secure until quantum computers are widespread, as it is considered to be vulnerable to quantum attacks from only having 64-bits of strength against it. Hey maybe you'll be dead by then and beyond embarrassment from future digital archaeologists looking at your browsing history.
 
  • Like
Reactions: joe23
That would depend on whether your laptop has any internal modules for Intel Turbo Memory, Smart Response Technology or Optane Memory, ExpressCache or ReadyCache, or even Microsoft ReadyBoost--which at least encrypts the cached data using AES-128 because it's normally used with removable cards.

AES-128 should be pretty secure until quantum computers are widespread, as it is considered to be vulnerable to quantum attacks from only having 64-bits of strength against it. Hey maybe you'll be dead by then and beyond embarrassment from future digital archaeologists looking at your browsing history.
It's a 2017 laptop so it probably doesn't have any of that technology you mentioned?
But none of those modules have enough memory to store a 700mb video file backed up right? hehe.

Yes, I don't mind if future digital archaeologists find some jaw dropping stuff of mine when I'm gone, just focused more on the next 2 days after I sell this laptop without the hard drive in it.
 
Since that drive has OS on it now and is presumably working it would be a good idea to gather together the damning information and either save it somewhere secure or delete it altogether. Afterwards you could run something like DBAN on the drive and either keep it for additional external storage, or destroy it as you see fit.
Pulling data from an old OS drive can be difficult as times goes on, we forget what it was, falls into the wrong PC wiz grandkids hands....

But, to the point, when you remove that HDD the laptop itself won't hold anything to be concerned about unless there is optical media left in there with something.
 
  • Like
Reactions: joe23