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posted by martyb on Tuesday February 12 2019, @12:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the use-it-for-target-practice dept.

The Naval Surface Warfare Center at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico has—literally—tons of IT hardware and equipment used for classified programs that need to be destroyed by the most secure and irreversible means.

While White Sands Missile Range is an Army facility, NAVSEA researchers have a detachment there working on "land-based weapons system testing, directed energy weapons testing"—lasers—"and research rocket launch support," according to their webpage. Those researchers have on hand some 4,000 pounds of IT equipment, including magnetic, optical and solid-state storage devices with highly sensitive, classified data.

The center issued a solicitation for destruction services that specifically calls for all designated equipment to be burned "to ash."

The information stored on these devices is highly sensitive, as evidenced by the physical security requirements set forth in the solicitation. The incineration facility must have "at the minimum, secure entry, 24-hour armed guards and 24/7 camera surveillance with recordable date and time capabilities."

https://www.nextgov.com/cybersecurity/2019/02/navy-needs-2-tons-storage-devices-burned-ash/154629/


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  • (Score: 1) by pTamok on Tuesday February 12 2019, @09:42PM

    by pTamok (3042) on Tuesday February 12 2019, @09:42PM (#800346)

    Run each inventory item into a ceramic lined rod- or ball-mill operating in batch mode. Take the resultant powder and feed into a fluidised bed furnace.

    Alternatively, dissolve the powder in boiling aqua regia (can be done in batch mode), and dry. The result should be almost completely fully oxidised 'ash', with the exception of most of the 'noble metals', and PTFE from cable insulation. You could treat the ash with Piranha solution to chew up any organic residues remaining.