http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/20/nsa-snowden-files-drives-destroyed-london
Quote::
Talks began with government officials on a procedure that might satisfy their need to ensure the material had been destroyed, but which would at the same time protect the Guardian's sources and its journalism.
The compromise ultimately brought Paul Johnson, Guardian News and Media's executive director Sheila Fitzsimons, and one of its top computer experts, David Blishen, to the basement of its Kings Place office on a hot Saturday morning to meet two GCHQ officials with notebooks and cameras.
The intelligence men stood over Johnson and Blishen as they went to work on the hard drives and memory chips with angle grinders and drills, pointing out the critical points on circuit boards to attack. They took pictures as the debris was swept up but took nothing away.
No, seriously. <img src="images/smiles/icon_eek.gif" alt="Shocked" title="Shocked" /> <img src="images/smiles/icon_question.gif" alt="Question" title="Question" />
I would have preferred thermite, personally.
http://hackaday.com/2008/09/16/how-to-thermite-based-hard-drive-anti-forensic-destruction/
most probably it has been excluded because of pollution/environmental issues with the EA.
Lesson learned is:
Do not use plastic cups, as the coffee gets a bad tasteand<img src="images/smiles/icon_wink.gif" alt="Wink" title="Wink" /> :
Quote::
However, in a subsequent meeting, an intelligence agency expert argued that the material was still vulnerable. He said by way of example that if there was a plastic cup in the room where the work was being carried out foreign agents could train a laser on it to pick up the vibrations of what was being said. Vibrations on windows could similarly be monitored remotely by laser.
jaclaz
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