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What Happens To A File Once You Hit Delete
If you chose not to tinker around with your Windows operating
system, then the file automatically goes in the Recycle Bin. If you
ever decide you still need the file, you can simply search through
the trash (a funny concept Microsoft makes us go through) and you’ll
find your deleted file intact and easily recoverable. However, if
you disable the Recycle Bin, things will go slightly different.
Most of us consider
deleting a file permanent. After all, you can’t see it in the
directory structure so it’s definitely not there. Unfortunately (or
well, fortunately, depending on how you look at the situation) when
it comes to computers, seeing is not necessarily a premise for
believing. A file doesn’t get permanently destroyed and eradicated
from your memory by simply deleting it from the directory structure.
Instead, it is kept safe in a free memory area, stored in case you
change your mind and need your file back. What gets deleted is the
link pointing towards the file, so if you would compare a file to a
book page, deleting the file does not tear the page out of the book,
but rather deletes the page’s index from the table of contents,
represented by the file system here.
Still, your hard
disk space is not infinite, so eventually the space your deleted
files gets crammed into will fill up and no more “closet” space will
be available. What the operating system does in such a case is
overwrite the old deleted files with newer deleted files, so there’s
a certain time limit in which you could recover your lost data. For
example, if you deleted a file from your hard drive a year ago, the
chances are slim that you’ll find it intact in the “closet” area.
Instead, if you deleted it yesterday there’s no chance it got
overwritten.
Of course, data
recovery techniques have been constantly improving and specialists
can now recover the data even after it has been overwritten! Some
companies boast the fact that they can recreate files that have been
deleted and subsequently overwritten in the lost memory sector by up
to 10 times. However, after 10 overwrites, there’s a good chance
that the data that is recovered is not entirely intact and some
parts might be missing.
Just like there are
programs that help you recover deleted data, there are other ones
that help you permanently delete it! Sometimes you’ll want to
permanently destroy some data you stored on your PC and your closest
resemblance to a paper shredder is such a data deletion tool. As
data recovery technology is on a constant rise, there’s a chance
bits and pieces of your “permanently deleted” data can still be
found, so it’s best not to count entirely on that if you really,
really don’t want someone to find out what you stored on your hard
disk.
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