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Charity hits back at 'destroy your PC' claims

Put down the six-inch nail and step away from the scaremongering...

Tags: glamorgan, computer aid, pc

By Will Sturgeon

Published: 18 February 2005 18:10 GMT

A charity which reconditions second hand Pentium computers for use in the Third World has hit out at media coverage this week which encouraged companies to destroy old kit by driving nails through the hard drive of each computer they discard.

Computer Aid International assures businesses it will wipe data to government approved levels and offers strict reassurances to businesses that their data will be entirely removed before the PC gets its new lease of life.

However, the organisation fears media hype from mainstream press will see a decline in the numbers of computers it is able to send to schools and hospitals in countries such as Rwanda.

Vaneeta Mahtani, security specialist at Computer Aid, told silicon.com: "We cover all requirements in terms of legal responsibility. We will collect the equipment from the company and will ensure all data is removed to the strictest of standards."

The original research, compiled by Glamorgan University, suggested a high percentage of computers which get discarded at their end of life contain large amounts of sensitive data, however the University is concerned that its research will wrongly be used as a justification for the destruction of equipment which could still serve a purpose elsewhere.

Dr Andrew Blyth from Glamorgan University's computer science department told silicon.com the reason behind the research was an attempt to publicise the need to do more to ensure data is destroyed before it is passed elsewhere – be it a charity, a recycler or even a landfill, until understanding of the WEEE directive removes the latter option entirely.

Blyth told silicon.com: "I wholly support companies donating PCs to charity but only as long as they realise that doesn't abdicate their responsibility as far as the data on those computers is concerned."

Mahtani encouraged any companies still tempted by the hammer and nails option to talk to Computer Aid. She said the organisation would even give back control units for the companies to check after the data has been wiped.

"We are fully open to that. We have total faith in our methods and would urge companies to try us out."

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