On Mon, 2 May 2005, sunder wrote:
Yeah, but these days, I'd go with the largest flash drive I could afford. USB2 or otherwise. I don't believe you can recover data from these once you actually overwrite the bits (anyone out there know any different?).
There are lots of pitfalls in secure erasure, even without considering physical media attacks. Your filesystem may not overwrite data on the same blocks used to write the data originally, for instance. Plaintext may be left in the journal and elsewhere. Even filling up the disk may not do it, as some filesystems keep blocks in reserve. I did a demo a few years ago where I wrote plaintext, overwrote, then dumped the filesystem blocks out and found parts of the plaintext. For anybody who hasn't read it, the Gutmann paper is "Secure Deletion of Data from Magnetic and Solid-State Memory", and is highly recommended. He shows that even RAM isn't safe against physical media attacks. -J