Message from @Xenon
Discord ID: 679607978755620907
Thats the point
Not really. Unless you secure wipe a system, they’re a mountain of digital evidence.
Even more so for interconnected systems.
if one server system crashes and deletres all your data, and you had no backups then you did something really basic, really wrong
did you know
You 2 are under the assunptions that nobody in governments are corrupt
that even apps like bleachbit do not wipe the data off fully?
Look, it’s the future. It gives us integrity we don’t currently have. And all of your concerns apply to the current voting system.
the only way to fully wipe a drive would be actual incineration
all of your concerns are applicable to the current systems
If they can kill Epstein and make up some bullshit reason, what do you think they'd do with electronic voting?
"whoops a fire started and brnt all the ballots"
as i understand it the only way to fully wipe a hard drive is to rewrite every single bit on it by force which is what bleachbit does
@Papa John's Day of Reckoning again, you need people to burn those votes
"oh i might have miscounted that 100-100 vote and thats why we got 101-99
People talk
you need people to bleachbit the servers???
its the same
and a burnt ballot cannot be recovered, a bleachbit hdd can
>bleachbit lmao
usually when you delete a file, the system just toggles it to be like... invisible, but its still there until that physical data segment gets overwritten which wont happen unless the entire drive fills up multiple times
@Pinks they mentioned bleachbit first lol
you can just rewrite an entire drive with garbage data using command prompt in windows
Someone explain to me why you can't just command a drive to be erased by writing zero on every bit?
yes, thats how deletion works, bleachbit overwrites the files multiple times so that it is better concealed, but there are still traces of this having occured, such as a drive being all 1s or 0s, or being all random, not to mention that there are ways to still recover the data, at least partially even after 34 overwrites IIRC
Doesn't work that way.
Also you seem to think all zeroes would make it absent of data
A blank drive isn't all 0s
It's nothing
like i said, the only way to truly destroy data is incineration
It has no 1s or 0s
Without going full nerd, there’s plenty of evidence to prove a drive was wiped.
It would make it unreadable, though
again, it can be recovered, even if it is unreadable
No.
how?
That’s not correct.
get a drill press and drive large holes through the hard disc, then set it on fire, then put it into a 5000 pound metal press, then grind it into dust, then snort the dust and shit it out and flush the toilet several times