Will judges assume you are hiding something illegal simply because you have clutter cleaning programs like Bleachbit or Ccleaner? Or, just wiping free space? Could deleting, scrubbing, wiping, etc. be deemed as a wrong doing in the future and a sing of guilt?
They can assume whatever they want. The matter is whether they can prove it.
Jonathan Zdziarski, a computer security expert, characterized BleachBit as a fairly "amateur" tool that doesn't raise any red flags.
"It looks like the type of tool someone would run who's conscious of cleaning old crud off their system," Zdziarski said. "Someone trying to cover their tracks would likely pay for and use a much more expensive, specialized data destruction tool."
>>56675044
>Will judges assume you are hiding something illegal simply because you have clean the clutter out of your office area? Or, just making space? Could shredding paper be deemed as a wrong doing in the future and a sing of guilt?
>>56675208
shredders are no longer safe, there was a contest and hackers have successfully rebuilt destroyed documents
>>56675516
did they rebuild documents that had been shredded and then overwrote 35 times?
i doubt it
>>56675749
Kek
>>56675188
>computer security expert
>"likely pay for and use a much more expensive, specialized data destruction tool"
topkek someone who knows what they're doing will be using GNU/Linux and use libre software to make sure there are no backdoors and that the program actually deletes the data.