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DoYourData File Eraser 2.1 (Win&Mac) era disponibile come app gratuita il 01 maggio 2018!
I dati smarriti possono essere cancellati, formattati oppure smarriti dal programma di recupero dati. Per evitare il recupero dei dati, è necessario avere un programma per cancellare i file. DoYourData File Eraser può aiutarti a cancellare in maniera sicura e permanente i file/le cartelle di riferimento, nessuna possibilità di recuperare i dati.
Puoi cancellare i dati in maniera permanente da:
- PC/Laptop
- SSD/HDD
- USB Drive
- Scheda di Memoria
- Fotocamera Digitale
- Altri Supporti di Memoria
Windows 10/ 8.1/ 8/ 7/ Vista/ XP/ 2000 and Windows Server 2012/2008/2003; macOS 10.13 High Sierra, 10.12 Sierra and OS X 10.11, 10.10, 10.9, 10.8, 10.7, 10.6; Languages: English
18 MB
$9.99
Programma di recupero dati gratuito per recuperare i file cancellati oppure smarriti da SSD/HDD, hard drive esterno, USB flash drive, scheda di memoria, ecc.
Programma molto facile da usare e potente per recuperare contatti, SMS, foto, video, ecc. smarriti da dispositivo Apple oppure backup iTunes/Cloud.
Cancella file/cartelle in maniera completa e permanente, pulisci l'hard drive, pulisci lo spazio libero del disco. Dopo la cancellazione, i dati possono essere recuperati con il programma di recupero dati.
Commenti su DoYourData File Eraser 2.1 (Win&Mac)
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
For $9.99, you'd expect more - the homepage shows this version is lacking a privacy cleaner (internet cache, cookies), and lacks free space erasure and entire hard drive.
Plenty of free cleaners out there that do everything this does and more.
The ever popular free CCleaner can erase free space/whole drive, and of course clean up internet traces. Can also add files or folders to remove, as well as many other useful tools. https://www.ccleaner.com/
Then there's the free Eraser which has been going for years: https://eraser.heidi.ie/
Can grab IObit's file shredder as part of the free Advanced System Care: https://www.iobit.com/en/index.php
Could go on listing, but everyone will have their favourite utilities.
Even as a free giveaway, this seems limited compared to just the free tools already out there, so I'll give it a miss today.
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Still up to its old tricks: today's developer continues to publish 'reviews' on its website of competitor products with download buttons that seem to be for the software under review but are, in truth, downloads of its own -- including this one:
https://www.doyourdata.com/erase-data/ccleaner-data-erasure.html
GOTD regular TK flagged this up some time back on this comment thread; his / her observation about never trusting a software supplier so unethical that it tries to profit off the back of someone else's product is as relevant now as it was then.
Thanks, GOTD, but no thanks: this Chinese developer needs to start being a darn sight more honest before I'd trust any of its software with a place on my computer.
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A question for the developer - this and other similar products claim they can permanently erase individual file(s) from SSDs and USB memory sticks. These devices use 'wear leveling' algorithms which map logical sectors to lesser used physical sectors to protect the same areas in NAND memory and this mapping is invisible to software.
So he first time I store 'password.dat' to the SSD it might appear to the operating system as sectors 100-109 (which could be mapped to physical sectors 200-209 arbitrarily.) Now when I run your software I assume it says 'a-ha, I'll write some random pattern to sectors 100-109 which the SSD could now map to sectors 210-219.) My original data is still sitting in the memory chips where they were first written. Granted it would be difficult but not impossible for other software to recover my password.dat file (one solution would be to allocate all free sectors in the file allocation table to a 'new' file without actually writing data to the sector and you could paw through all the freespace on the drive.)
Of course I could delete 'password.dat' then run your program to wipe all freespace which should actually destroy the data but it could be quite slow just to eradicate a tiny file.
Sorry for the nerdy question but if you could explain how you wipe an individual file without writing to all the unused space on a SSD it would be very much appreciated. Just like to get a clear understanding as some of us are security retentive. Thanks!
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