Are Deleted Files Completely Erased?
A common
misconception when deleting files is that they are completely removed from the
hard drive.
However,
users should be aware that highly sensitive data can still be retrieved from a
hard drive even after the files have been deleted because the data is not
really gone.
Files
that are moved to the recycle bin (on PCs) or the trash can (on Macs) stay in
those folders until the user empties the recycle bin or trash can. Once they
have been deleted from those folders, they are still located in the hard drive
and can be retrieved with the right software.
Any time that a file is deleted from a hard drive, it is not
erased.
What is
erased is the bit of information that points to the location of the file on the
hard drive.
The operating system uses these pointers to build the
directory tree structure (the file allocation table), which consists of the
pointers for every other file on the hard drive.
When the
pointer is erased, the file essentially becomes invisible to the operating
system. The file still exists; the operating system just doesn't know how to
find it. It is, however, relatively easy to retrieve deleted files with the
right software.
The only way to completely erase a file with no trace is to
overwrite the data.
The
operating system will eventually overwrite files that have no pointers in the
directory tree structure, so the longer an unpointed
file remains in the hard drive the greater the probability that it has been
overwritten. There are also many "file erasing" software products
currently on the market that will automatically permanently erase files by
overwriting them.