A recent report by heise article on HDD fraud highlights a concerning reality: fraud involving used hard drives sold as new is not slowing down.
According to the investigation, even experienced data recovery companies are being misled. Drives purchased as “new” turned out to contain hardware dating back over a decade, with cases including disks from as early as 2009 being resold in modern enclosures.
Even more alarming:
This is not an isolated issue. Across the market, fraudsters are becoming increasingly sophisticated—resetting usage metrics, altering labels, and even manipulating internal logs to make heavily used drives appear brand new.
For organizations handling sensitive data, this trend introduces two critical risks:
If previously used drives still contain recoverable data, companies risk data leaks, compliance violations, and reputational damage.
Drives with thousands of hidden operating hours may fail prematurely, impacting reliability, SLAs, and infrastructure stability.
In short:
You cannot trust a drive based on appearance, labeling, or even basic diagnostics alone.
The root of the problem is simple — lack of verifiable proof.
Traditional processes rely on:
But as the market shows, these are no longer sufficient.
With Securaze, every processed HDD or SSD comes with a tamper-proof, audit-ready certificate that provides full transparency and trust.
Each certificate includes:
This ensures that what you see is exactly what the device has experienced—no hidden history, no guesswork.
Beyond verification, the core issue remains: data must be completely and irreversibly destroyed.
Securaze achieves this with the Securaze Erasure Engine 2.0, which:
This means:
Whether a disk is brand new or 15 years old, Securaze eliminates all data with the same level of certified security.
The used hardware market will continue to grow—and so will fraud.
The lesson is clear:
Instead, rely on verifiable proof, certified processes, and complete transparency.
In a world where even “new” drives may carry hidden histories,
trust must be engineered—not assumed.
And that’s exactly what Securaze delivers.