User's Manual

The guaranteed wiping of information from magnetic media (e.g. a hard disk drive) means it is
impossible to recover data by even a qualified specialist with the help of all known tools and recovery
methods.
This problem can be explained in the following way: Data is stored on a hard disk as a binary
sequence of 1 and 0 (ones and zeros), represented by differently magnetized parts of a disk.
Generally speaking, a 1 written to a hard disk is read as 1 by its controller, and 0 is read as 0.
However, if you write 1 over 0, the result is conditionally 0.95 and vice versa – if 1 is written over 1
the result is 1.05. These differences are irrelevant for the controller. However, using special
equipment, one can easily read the «underlying» sequence of 1's and 0's.
It only requires specialized software and inexpensive hardware to read data "deleted" this way by
analyzing magnetization of hard disk sectors, residual magnetization of track sides and/or by using
current magnetic microscopes.
Writing to magnetic media leads to subtle effects summarized as follows: every track of a disk stores
an image of every record ever written to it, but the effect of such records (magnetic layer) becomes
more subtle as time passes.
20.2.1. Functioning principles of Information wiping methods
Physically, the complete wiping of information from a hard disk involves the switching of every
elementary magnetic area of the recording material as many times as possible by writing specially
selected sequences of logical 1's and 0's (also known as samples).
Using logical data encoding methods in current hard disks, you can select samples of symbol (or
elementary data bit) sequences to be written to sectors in order to repeatedly and effectively wipe
confidential information.
Methods offered by national standards provide (single or triple) recording of random symbols to disk
sectors that are straightforward and arbitrary decisions, in general, but still acceptable in simple
situations. The most effective information-wiping method is based on deep analysis of subtle features
of recording data to all types of hard disks. This knowledge speaks of the necessity of complex
multipass methods to guarantee information wiping.
The detailed theory of guaranteed information wiping is described in an article by Peter Gutmann.
Please see:
Secure Deletion of Data from Magnetic and Solid-State Memory
20.2.2. Information wiping methods used by Acronis
The table below briefly describes information wiping methods used by Acronis. Each description
features the number of hard disk sector passes along with the number(s) written to each sector byte.
The description of built-in information wiping methods
No. Algorithm (writing method) Passes Record
1. United States Department of
Defense 5220.22-M
4
1
st
pass – randomly selected symbols to each byte of
each sector, 2 – complementary to written during
the 1
st
pass; 3 – random symbols again; 4 – writing
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