NevadaGirl90
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2017
- Messages
- 4
- Thread Author
- #1
Hello:
I am trying to sell a computer to someone else, and want to more or less sanitize my personal info from the computer. I secure-deleted the files with sensitive info, uninstalled my financial software, and then ran a program like Eraser that claimed to effectively wipe all free space. I was able to verify this worked to an extant using a basic file recovery program --- it seemed to show that all my old deleted files were gone (whereas it had shown them as recoverable prior to the free space wipe).
So then I went into "System Protection" and deleted all my System Recovery Points, as I don't want my buyer to be able to inadvertently restore all my old financial software (and it's program files) by running a System Restore.
Here's my question, now that I have deleted all my system recovery points, If I re-run the free-space wipe program, it should theoretically be able to wipe the sectors that were previously occupied by the System Recovery Point files, correct? Meaning, am I correct to assume that Windows 7 does not store the System Recovery files in a virtual location of the harddrive that will never be normally assessable to a free-space wipe program? For note, I don't have the old Windows re-install disk around, and I'm not looking for anything drastic like wiping the whole harddrive and re-installing windows. I just want to sell the computer basically as-is without worrying that my financial software and its (program files with my info) can be later restored or accessed by any tech-savvy user. Believe me, this is a legitimate concern for my situation.
ALSO, If I go to Control Panel>System>System Protection, and then Click "Delete," that does in fact delete ALL of the System/File Recovery Points, correct?
I hope this makes sense. Thanks for your help.
I am trying to sell a computer to someone else, and want to more or less sanitize my personal info from the computer. I secure-deleted the files with sensitive info, uninstalled my financial software, and then ran a program like Eraser that claimed to effectively wipe all free space. I was able to verify this worked to an extant using a basic file recovery program --- it seemed to show that all my old deleted files were gone (whereas it had shown them as recoverable prior to the free space wipe).
So then I went into "System Protection" and deleted all my System Recovery Points, as I don't want my buyer to be able to inadvertently restore all my old financial software (and it's program files) by running a System Restore.
Here's my question, now that I have deleted all my system recovery points, If I re-run the free-space wipe program, it should theoretically be able to wipe the sectors that were previously occupied by the System Recovery Point files, correct? Meaning, am I correct to assume that Windows 7 does not store the System Recovery files in a virtual location of the harddrive that will never be normally assessable to a free-space wipe program? For note, I don't have the old Windows re-install disk around, and I'm not looking for anything drastic like wiping the whole harddrive and re-installing windows. I just want to sell the computer basically as-is without worrying that my financial software and its (program files with my info) can be later restored or accessed by any tech-savvy user. Believe me, this is a legitimate concern for my situation.
ALSO, If I go to Control Panel>System>System Protection, and then Click "Delete," that does in fact delete ALL of the System/File Recovery Points, correct?
I hope this makes sense. Thanks for your help.
Last edited:

You are responsible for getting rid of 100% of your personal data!! Using free programs without knowing how to do it properly, is like taking all your money out of your bank and giving it to someone you meet in line at a coffee shop and asking them to keep it safe for you! Not a good idea anywhere or anytime.
In today's world, this is a real concern, and I've been teaching people this for over 30 years.
The last explanation by Neemo is quite accurate. Differing answers to your questions are based on differing levels of experience with regular data recovery used by most Repair Techs, and then there is a thing called Forensics Data Recovery, which I have been involved in. This is sort of like the stuff you see on TV on crime shows such as CSI and NCIS (which is pretty accurate with lots of secret details left out). This stuff is closer to rocket science than one might think, so it's unlikely you're ever going to fully understand it. Having worked for 4 different hard drive manufacturers, designing disk drives and disk drive controllers, as well as teaching Computer Forensics Recovery to various law enforcement agencies, I am probably the most qualified person on this forum to answer your questions. However, that doesn't mean you are going to believe me. Additionally, I've held security clearances up to and including Top-Secret level clearances which means I can't explain all the details of how we perform Forensics Recovery on hard drives that have been "wiped", "erased", or intentionally physically damaged (such as the drilling of holes and sawing in half techniques mentioned). Without disclosing any National Secrets, I can tell you that Forensics Recovery still allows data to be recovered even from these drives that have been intentionally destroyed. In fact, that is how we found out who bombed the US Embassies in various bombings back in the 80s, long before 9-11 in 2001. We also use secure erasure methods in various missile systems that employ storage devices as well. I also worked on those.
