Educause Security Discussion mailing list archives
Finding duplicate data
From: James Moore <jhmiso () RIT EDU>
Date: Tue, 24 Feb 2009 15:58:45 -0500
This is an availability issue (it is also an information management issue). Sometimes people have so much stuff on their hard drives that important stuff gets misplaced, or they operate from old versions etc, with wrong conclusions reached (or previous decisions rehashed). And, yes, I have experienced some of that myself. I have found backup vendors working in this space, but they seem to just try to get as much onto a tape as is possible. What I am looking for is an easy to use gui that we could put in people's hands that does a couple of things well. 1) Detects pure duplicates, (probably by hash and size) and then allows for checks for deleting in various places. May even place a "moved to" message where deleted. 2) Checks for "versions" near matches, then displays sizes and modification times, and then has similar types of deletion/elimination. This is probably harder. Anyone know of anything like this? As we try to improve personal data management, something like this could be a great tool. Jim - - - - Jim Moore, CISSP, IAM Information Security Officer Rochester Institute of Technology 151 Lomb Memorial Drive Rochester, NY 14623-5603 (585) 475-5406 (office) (585) 255-0809 (Cell - Incident Reporting & Emergencies) (585) 475-7920 (fax) If you consciously try to thwart opponents, you are already late. Miyamoto Musashi, Japanese philosopher/samurai, 1645 "If we do not, on a national scale, attack organized criminals with weapons and techniques as effective as their own, they will destroy us." Robert F. Kennedy, 1960 Confidentiality Notice: Do the right thing. If this has the words "Confidential" or "Private" in the subject line, or similar language in the email body, or as a label on any attachment, then think. Do you know me? Did you expect to receive this? Do you recognize and work with the other addressees? If not, then you probably received this in error. Please, be respectful and courteous, and delete it immediately. Please, don't forward it to anyone. Now, wasn't that simple. Just, if you had made an error in a sensitive email, and I received it, what would you want me to do with it?
Attachment:
Jim Moore (jhmiso@rit.edu).vcf
Description: Jim Moore (jhmiso@rit.edu).vcf
Current thread:
- Finding duplicate data James Moore (Feb 24)
- <Possible follow-ups>
- Re: Finding duplicate data Dexter Caldwell (Feb 25)
- Re: Finding duplicate data Adam Nave (Feb 25)