Thu Mar 15, 2007 7:04PM EDT
See Comments (319)
It sounds like a slam dunk: Put a hard drive into a standard photocopier, so (depending on the copier's configuration) you can have a digital version of anything you run through the machine. That way, if the original is ever lost, you can always run back to the backup. (I hadn't realized this, but copiers have been including hard drives for five years now.)
But now people are finally waking up to the wrinkle in this plan, which should have been obvious: What do people use copiers for, anyway? Yes, for company flyers and employee manuals, but also for tax returns, insurance cards, photo IDs, and Social Security paperwork. Now what happens when that copier gets old and is sold on eBay? Gulp. Computerworld has more of the story.
Copiers are hardly highly-secure devices, and such data could be accessed via a network connection, too.
The wake-up call is, surprisingly, being delivered by Sharp, a manufacturer of these devices. The company polled Americans and found that 54 percent of those surveyed had no idea that photocopiers stored digital versions of everything put on the glass. Count me in the majority, I guess.
What to do? Naturally, Sharp (and presumably other companies too) are promoting its newer copiers, which encrypt digitally stored copies and "virtually shred" recent ones so they can't be recovered. If you've got such features on your office machine, make sure you use them. But also remember that next time you make copies at Kinko's or another copy shop, you could be leaving behind a copy of anything you reproduce. Behave accordingly.
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If it is newer than 5 years old without a doubt.
So the logical useful info that is omitted in this article is HOW to erase then reformat that hard drive in order to securely delete all data.
Smart idea, but scary since I have used them for copying what I thought were private just me knowing copies....like social security numbers and stuff!
Interesting
Ask them if they had it for less than 5 years or not. Check the model, and look on the internet after.
SO I guess doing on the copy machine is now out of the question...
Depends on the manufacture, if it's a black and white machine, not necessarily. Most b/w do not come with standard hard drives. All color copiers do however.
Wow, the is scary. I never realized that some copy machine had hard drives to 'remember' what they copied. I can't count how many times my social security and personal information had been copied for school, employment, or renting purposes. I'm glad they're coming up with technology to virtually 'shred' these images. Good job, Sharp.
Holy cow, I did not know that..
1 Posted by ib4it on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:22PM EDT Report Abuse
Does the copy machine down at 7-11 have this?