MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US
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@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
I'd wipe and install Ubuntu. I would probably ask my company to go a step further and give us new hard drives for a clean Ubuntu install.
Kids with little or no money and alot of time can be dangerous. Dont give them a chance to recover your data. That is my 2 cents.
Running DBAN for a full DDoD wipe would likely suffice as well, but who wants to let it take so long. . .
How much are 100GB laptop drives these days? I wouldn't take the risk.
Likely more than the value of the laptops. . .
That's the hard part. The time and money of even a super cheap hard drive is probably double the value of something being donated.
Understood, but you are creating potential risk otherwise.
Not creating, just not totally eliminating. But is the risk typically over $100? Not likely. Paying $100 to eliminate $2 of risk doesn't make sense.
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@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
I'd wipe and install Ubuntu. I would probably ask my company to go a step further and give us new hard drives for a clean Ubuntu install.
Kids with little or no money and alot of time can be dangerous. Dont give them a chance to recover your data. That is my 2 cents.
Running DBAN for a full DDoD wipe would likely suffice as well, but who wants to let it take so long. . .
How much are 100GB laptop drives these days? I wouldn't take the risk.
Likely more than the value of the laptops. . .
That's the hard part. The time and money of even a super cheap hard drive is probably double the value of something being donated.
Understood, but you are creating potential risk otherwise.
Not creating, just not totally eliminating. But is the risk typically over $100? Not likely. Paying $100 to eliminate $2 of risk doesn't make sense.
If you can confirm there is no sensitive data on ALL systems, which is difficult to confirm.
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@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
I'd wipe and install Ubuntu. I would probably ask my company to go a step further and give us new hard drives for a clean Ubuntu install.
Kids with little or no money and alot of time can be dangerous. Dont give them a chance to recover your data. That is my 2 cents.
Running DBAN for a full DDoD wipe would likely suffice as well, but who wants to let it take so long. . .
How much are 100GB laptop drives these days? I wouldn't take the risk.
Likely more than the value of the laptops. . .
That's the hard part. The time and money of even a super cheap hard drive is probably double the value of something being donated.
Understood, but you are creating potential risk otherwise.
Not creating, just not totally eliminating. But is the risk typically over $100? Not likely. Paying $100 to eliminate $2 of risk doesn't make sense.
If you can confirm there is no sensitive data on ALL systems, which is difficult to confirm.
The risk is minimal at best that data would be recovered off of a disk that has been dban passed only once and then has a clean OS installed afterwards.
The devices aren't going to North Korea, and it's very unlikely that any data on these has any value at all. So even if they were, the concern isn't worth spending for new drives.
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@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@scottalanmiller said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@dustinb3403 said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
@irj said in MS Licensing Issues Regarding Machines Donated for Use Outside of US:
I'd wipe and install Ubuntu. I would probably ask my company to go a step further and give us new hard drives for a clean Ubuntu install.
Kids with little or no money and alot of time can be dangerous. Dont give them a chance to recover your data. That is my 2 cents.
Running DBAN for a full DDoD wipe would likely suffice as well, but who wants to let it take so long. . .
How much are 100GB laptop drives these days? I wouldn't take the risk.
Likely more than the value of the laptops. . .
That's the hard part. The time and money of even a super cheap hard drive is probably double the value of something being donated.
Understood, but you are creating potential risk otherwise.
Not creating, just not totally eliminating. But is the risk typically over $100? Not likely. Paying $100 to eliminate $2 of risk doesn't make sense.
If you can confirm there is no sensitive data on ALL systems, which is difficult to confirm.
No, that's the risk assuming not knowing anything. Unless you can confirm that there IS sensitive data, then you have to go with the average. That's how risk works. You can't just assume the worst case scenario unless proven otherwise. Nor the least. That's where average comes in. And the average system carries essentially no risk.