This sentence is contradictory as it is.- Ricardo Dirani 14:30, (UTC) Reply "No unformatting utility can recover the data, but this is not the most secure way of destroying previous data". Only physically destroying the hard drive itself along with the magnetic particles will guarantee complete security.
#Disk formatting patterns + sans software#
This is not the most secure way of destroying the previous data, instead use something like DBAN to destroy old data, however no disk wiping software guarantees 100% destruction of stored data. No unformatting utility can recover data from a partition that was formatted by the /u parameter. The article doesn't say what either quick format or ntfs means.
No reference was provided, and it doesn't belong in this article anyway. Is there any information/links that back up this claim? There is a chance the drive could become corrupted. "Never use quick format when formatting a NTFS Drive. Tom94022 ( talk) 20:18, 22 November 2012 (UTC) Reply Quick Format and NTFS Destructive low-level formatting is a thing of past technology such as FDDs and ST506 HDDs.
Now fixed with cites (they were the hardest to find :-). Data is not lost - it's only unindexed if you're just formatting and no more. Try looking up EnCase to see how data is recovered. The facts need to be culled for this article, otherwise the article has no point. You can't have any 'might be true' in this document. Guy Harris ( talk) 23:13, (UTC) Reply It's still wrong. In any case, the "Recovery of data from a formatted disk" section says "As in file deletion by the operating system, data on a disk are not fully erased during every high-level format." I've changed the second paragraph to say ".some of this data might be recoverable with special tools" (I wouldn't recommend reformatting a disk with an arbitrary file system type and expecting all your data to come back easily). contribs) 17:57, 15 September 2005 (UTC) Reply That might be true of what the page calls "high-level formatting", but I doubt it's true of "low-level formatting".
Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.51.19.86 ( talk It's relatively untrue that formatting will cause you to lose all your data, a simple /unformat will usually restore all of the files.