Do the Maricopa auditors already have the missing files? Screenshot they posted was from data recovery software.
(media.greatawakening.win)
?? Theory ??
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (67)
sorted by:
Depends on how the data was deleted. If you remove the index the data is still there until you write new data on top of it. There are programs that do this such as bleachbit and ccleaner.
Agreed, former IT gunslinger here. Unless the locations on the drives that contained the original data were over written, the data is absolutely recoverable by the right technician. I think they have them dead to writes. Pun intended.
They forgot to wipe it, like with a cloth, then accidentally smash it with a hammer repeatedly.
She's already dead.
Executed last Friday.
it was infuriating
they didnt smash the scorecard with the hammer?
I have broken every old hard drive to bits, smashed with hammer, separated into multiple trash cans like I’m disposing of a dead hooker.
And there was only like a credit card number on it. Seems like a bird brain like Katie Hobbs would direct her IT staff to do something like that—or she would do it herself?
I shoot mine! I offer it as a service when I replace peoples computers! I let them know I take it out to the range and shoot it up to pieces! They love that! Of course I'm from Arizona.
the right technician? Fuck i drive forklifts and if the data wasn't written over top i could fucking do it.
You're probably forklift certified. Thats in a class of its own.
Since they were networked Is it possible that you could copy the drives over the network? That way if you, I dunno, seized the servers over seas they were networked to you could use the overseas servers to access the original machines to check?
^^
Even deleted data is recoverable up to a certain point. I know because I've used forensic recovery software in the past.
Destroy and delete?
Bleachbit for laptops, hammer for phones.
The government has software that will wipe a drive 40 times after putting fake data on it each time, yet it still can be recovered.
Not true. Maybe back in the 80's-90's when drive densities were negligible.
The last time I used the software was in 2012, and it was current... I am in healthcare software now, but forensic audits can recover the info unless the drive has been completely ruined.
You mean wipe it with a cloth?! HRC