A few months ago, we were lucky enough to partner with Spiceworks to share knowledge and answer some questions around the topic of SSDs.
Spiceworks is a great platform to share educational content, product reviews and ask any questions you may have about your IT profession. If you ever have a question about data recovery or data management, one of our top tech wizzes is available on the Spiceworks forum to help you out.
Here's a recap of what we covered in our first Spiceworks meet up:
There is no need to ship the drive cold. In sporadic cases, the temperature can sometimes affect NAND, so freezing a drive can occasionally clean up bit errors. When these errors are on the 'drive's firmware storage, it can make a previously failed drive work again temporarily.
We 'don't see a difference in the cost of the actual recovery, but there is a time cost. When we are familiar with the drive or firmware variation, we have better support for that drive. In cases when we are seeing new drives for the first time, it can take some time to perform research and development and work with the drive manufacturer to gain knowledge of the drive and the data layout.
We wouldn't say it's got worse, but we still have a lot to learn when it comes to SSDs, whereas our knowledge in tooling in terms of spinning hard drives is very mature. We are leading the way in terms of research and development expenditures for SSD support, so we learn all the time and developing new recovery methods.
TRIM does go and zero out the bits so shutting the drive down after an accidental deletion is critical. This will stop the process and hopefully retain most if not all of the data that was deleted.
There are controller-based recoveries and chip off recoveries. We prefer controller-based recoveries where we extract the data through the controller chip. This is a much quicker and reliable way of recovering the data.
We are not overwriting the drives firmware but more sideloading a version of our custom firmware that then interfaces with the 'drive's firmware. This is used to apply low-level operations that are not typically supported without our firmware directly interfacing the firmware of the drive.
There are a few things to try at home, given you have a backup or clone. If you do not have either, we advise you reach out to a data recovery company so that further damage can be mitigated.
Typically, deletion software does not damage a drive. It does wear the NAND just like any other IO operation though.
We still open any SSDs we receive in our cleanrooms, but we do not have to worry as much about getting particles on the platters as we do on spinning media.
Make sure all the NAND chips are broken for destruction or use an erasure software that has been validated by Ontrack.
QLC NAND is the newest and densest flash. We would expect to see this technology continue to drop in price and rise in capacity
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