• dohpaz42
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    3 days ago

    Once upon a time hard drives were made of magnetic plates that spin at high speeds, and are equally devastated by magnets.

    I would imagine that given their now low cost, hard drives are still used in crypto mining.

    • Psythik@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      Yeah but what will destroying the hard drive(s) with a magnet do? If you have a spare drive handy, downtime will be minimal. It’s not like the crypto is lost forever just because a hard drive died.

    • Lemmist@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      and are equally devastated by magnets

      Actually they were not. Their case was offering an adequate protection.

      • CthuluVoIP
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        3 days ago

        A hard drive can be corrupted by minimal exposure to a basic electromagnet like a CRT degaussing coil, even without exposing the platters.

        It would do nothing, however, in a server environment filled with racks, raised floors, and lots of barriers between a person and the drives. You’d still need to pass the coil over the drives themselves, while nearly making contact for several seconds to a minute to cause any significant data loss.

        • Lemmist@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          You’d still need to pass the coil over the drives themselves, while nearly making contact for several seconds to a minute

          It is called “Actually they were not. Their case was offering an adequate protection” :)

          • CthuluVoIP
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            3 days ago

            The drive case itself didn’t, though. The server, air around the components within its case, the air around the server within the rack, the rack, and the other ferrous materials in the room are what provide enough interference to prevent bit flipping on the disk for the most part. This is assuming a reasonable source of magnetic radiation and not a massive bench power supply on a crash cart powering a rolling EMP. (Of course, I’m being hyperbolic, and it would really just be a more powerful electromagnet and not an EMP)

            An electromagnet or even in some cases, a powerful enough rare earth magnet exposed to the drives themselves, or left in proximity to a single computer for an extended period of time can cause destructive data loss to a spinning platter hard disk.