Yeah, I meant physically destroy. I have no desire to reuse the tapes for anything and I don't want our data sitting in the dumpster.
I've been doing what you suggested.. burning the tapes. Just thought there might be a more environmentally friendly alternative. I suppose only burning a little plastic isn't so bad.
You could use a bulk tape eraser on them and then crush them. Just don't use the tape eraser in the computer room.
I've also seen shredders that will destroy tapes but I don't imagine they are cheap. James P. Cottingham
When a man sits with a pretty girl for an hour, it seems like a minute. But let him sit on a hot stove for a minute and it's longer than any hour. That's relativity.
[tab][tab]Albert Einstein explaining his Theory of Relativity to a group of journalists.
The method of destroying the tape really depends on how well you want it destroyed. Tape hangs around for a long time before it decomposes. I was in the Air Force and had to physically destroy tapes. We first degaussed them (electronically erases the data), then broke the cases open, and lastly burned the tapes. All we were left with was the cases and ash.
I would suggest destruction "Office Space" stye, ie taking them out behind the office and beating them to smithereens with a baseball bat while playing loud rap music. Might as well take a tape drive and backup server along while you're at it.
Or you could do it "Godfather" Style, have them sit around a table, and you walk behind them with a baseball bat then beat the crap out of the one you wanted to get rid of.
Better yet, put the destroyed tape in your boss's bed on the pillow next to him...
nyrfaninva, the point in destroying them is to be sure no data is recoverable. Otherwise, I'd just throw them away or, as you suggest, donate them. The data is too sensitive to trust simple erasure of any sort.
Besides, you wouldn't want them. The reason I'm getting rid of them is that they've been used to the point of being unreliable.
On a two-week rotation (each tape gets used once every two weeks), I try to replace the tapes every six to nine months. That's probably longer than what is recommended and, in reality, they sometimes go even longer. When they've reached the one-year mark, the backups start reporting errors.
It makes the tape unreadable. It's the oldest and still the best way to dispose of tape backups. Check around with the old pro's, they will tell you. (Takes experience to know this one!) Sebastian Jazzer
MCSE 4.0, Network+, A+, Web Developer
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.