
For some reason, a lot of IT folks love to try some pretty wacky stuff for themselves. The area of data destruction is no exception.
Slideshow: Take a closer look at creative methods used by IT workers
Our research has unearthed a few methods suggested or used by your peers to destroy such storage media as hard disks, tapes and CDs. Some of these methods are entertaining, but the obvious caveats apply to others: They involve potentially dangerous or harmful substances and activities that are likely to raise the hackles of hard-working OSHA, HazMat or EPA personnel. (Some even may be downright illegal in your jurisdiction.)
Whether for its adrenalin rush or the mere simplicity of the solution, many sources like the idea of wielding a sledgehammer on the hard disk they want to destroy. The goal is to smash the heads into the disk platter, which probably will break the mechanism, letting them get at the data. Once the hard disk is out of the computer (an important first step), smacking it with a sledgehammer on the large side of the drive about four or five times should do the trick. An automated device that can crush the drive is the Hard Disk Crusher from EDR Solutions.
In his blog on the "Ten Commandments of Data Destruction," security expert Robert J. Hansen suggests heating the drive past the Curie point, the temperature at which metal loses its magnetic properties.