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  • Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. But now

  • I'm not. I'm gone like 90% of the original silent films

  • ever made. Six of the seven wonders of the ancient world

  • deleted, like that text you thought twice about sending

  • or a Snapchat photo, right?

  • When Stalin decided that Trotsky was an enemy of the state,

  • he had Trotsky removed from photos he appeared in

  • with Lenin. Plenty of software tools and professional services

  • allow you to do the same. Don't just

  • forget the actual attendees of a moment in time,

  • delete them. But where do things go

  • when they're deleted?

  • The Google Ngram Viewer allows you to search words and phrases

  • in 5.2 million books published between 1500

  • and 2008. It's a great way to see how

  • the words we use have changed overtime.

  • 1979 was a significant

  • year. According to the Ngram Viewer, it was the first year we begin to use the

  • word

  • delete more often than the word

  • erase. Biological deletion

  • still wins though. Forget is by far more pervasive in our communication

  • but how does a computer forget?

  • Moving a file to the trash is just the beginning.

  • To protect against accidental deletion, when thrown in the trash

  • a file remains on your computer in a temporary directory, a sort of

  • purgatory, where it awaits a more ultimate deletion but can be resurrected

  • if you wish. When you empty the trash

  • you are warned that you cannot undo the action.

  • But when you empty the trash, the physical space

  • inhabited by the file isn't actually emptied.

  • It's marked as empty. Available

  • if and when new data needs to be stored somewhere.

  • The file's home has become available real estate

  • but the file itself hasn't moved out. Only the pointers

  • have gone away. Pointers are another type of data on your drive that point to

  • places in memory

  • where the actual file they are referencing can be found.

  • They're a bit like the table of contents, which means that on most

  • operating systems deleting a file and emptying the trash

  • is like deleting a chapter from a book

  • by turning to the table of contents and marking

  • the chapter as empty. There's nothing here, do what you want with the pages.

  • To a computer reading the table of contents it looks like the space is

  • empty but of course that doesn't change the fact that the contents of the

  • chapter

  • are still there. Special data recovery tools

  • look through memory marked empty available

  • to see what's actually there. If you're lucky,

  • they can even find a file and save it, bring it back

  • mark it not available, undeleted.

  • But if some of the file has already been overwritten,

  • there can be problems. The file can be

  • corrupted, melded together with other data like some kind of digital

  • Frankenstein's monster. A couple years ago

  • a laptop that belonged to photographer Melanie Willhide

  • was stolen. It contained many of her recent digital photos.

  • Luckily, police were able to return the laptop to her. They found it in a car they

  • pulled over,

  • but the thief had wiped the laptop's hard drive clean and had been using it

  • for his own purposes.

  • Data recovery experts were able to find

  • some of her files, still there, on the now-empty space,

  • but the files had been slightly overwritten

  • by things the thief had done. They'd been corrupted but in a

  • really cool way. So cool Willhide decided to exhibit the work.

  • She titled the show after the thief who made it possible,

  • "To Adrian Rodriguez, with love."

  • If you want to delete the file so completely

  • it can't even be recovered in a cool, weird way, like Willhide's photos,

  • you will need to overwrite the unwanted file

  • completely. Deny the file a proper burial

  • and rearrange its corpse with new data.

  • One overwrite should be fine but some people do as many as 35.

  • Even 35 overwrites might not be enough.

  • Sure, the overridden data is hidden, but what about bad

  • sectors? These are parts of a drive that devices can't access

  • because of failed transistors or physical damage.

  • An overwrite won't be able to reach them, meaning any data that was ever put there

  • stays there. So, if you are the United States Department of Defense and you

  • don't want to take any risks,

  • you will also shred, physically polarize

  • unwanted drives. The US, Europe, Japan

  • often send such electronics waste to dumps

  • in Ghana, like this one. This city in Ghana is known as

  • Earth's digital dumping ground.

  • Why Ghana? Well, it is cheaper to send

  • unsalvageable electronics to Africa, marked as a donation,

  • than it is to properly recycle them.

  • But there, in these electronic dumps,

  • the files can still be brought back to life.

  • Organized criminals operating in Ghana have managed to successfully recover

  • data

  • from unregulated e-dumps. They've been able to find confidential

  • multi-million-dollar agreements, involving

  • the Defense Intelligence Agency, Homeland Security

  • and the TSA. Shredding

  • paper to get rid of whatever used to be on the paper isn't even safe

  • either. It's not easy and it doesn't always work. But by scanning

  • shreds of paper computer software can match the pieces together.

  • But in the past, shredded documents have been unshred

  • by hand. In 1979 Iranian students seized the US Embassy in Tehran.

  • With the help of local carpet weavers and years of hard work,

  • they managed to reassemble thousands of pages of confidential documents

  • shred by the CIA. The smaller the shredded particles

  • are and the more of them there are, the more difficult the task. So,

  • the Department of Defense requires that the majority of shredded particles

  • not exceed 5 square millimetres.

  • If you really want to delete something, destroy it,

  • erase it, time is on your side.

  • In about 5.4 billion years

  • the Sun will become the ultimate shredder.

  • A red giant large enough to swallow earth whole.

  • Everything will be fine for billions of years.

  • But many accepted models of the universe predict that in 10 to the 100

  • years

  • whatever intelligence is left will witness the universe's

  • dark era and its final

  • Heat Death, the end of the universe, the end of

  • any file or photo or memory of you

  • ever being accessed again. Every time something happens

  • a little bit of energy is lost. For instance,

  • friction through sound or heat. That energy goes out into the universe a

  • little bit at a time, slowly

  • more and more. Eventually, in a closed system,

  • energy becomes homogeneous, evenly distributed, the same

  • everywhere. There's no gradient maximum

  • entropy. In a little glass of ice water it's pretty quotidian

  • but given enough time our entire universe

  • may be no different. A gradient, a difference in energy from one place to

  • another is necessary for

  • things to happen, for files to be created and read,

  • for life to exist. And in 10 to the 100 years

  • there may not be any usable energy

  • left. In Isaac Asimov's short story "The Last Question"

  • humans are concerned about this. As the story

  • leapfrogs billions of years into the future,

  • their list of solutions doesn't get any longer

  • than none. So, if we think across a grand timescale

  • is cosmic deletion the freezing

  • of everything, heat death, all we have to look forward to

  • in this universe?

  • We went to the Moon. We brought

  • flags with us that we planted on the Moon, representing a place

  • on earth. But those American flags on the Moon

  • are likely erased now,

  • their symbols and colors bleached by the intense radiation of the Sun on the

  • lunar surface,

  • unfiltered by any atmosphere. The flags are still there, we didn't

  • take them back with us but now day are

  • empty. White flags. White flags representing our surrender

  • to the inevitability of deletion in the universe.

  • But we, today, are preoccupied with

  • just the opposite. What really saturates our language,

  • what we really seem to talk about is

  • creation. Things happening, not

  • loss. Compared to erase,

  • forget and delete, "make" practically

  • deletes deletion.

  • The flags on the Moon are bleached

  • out but is that bleak? Are they

  • deleted or blank, like a fresh

  • sheet of paper ready for new stories? Really, it just depends on what you

  • make of it. So thanks for making things.

  • And as always,

  • thanks for watching.

Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. But now

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削除したファイルはどこに行くの? (Where Do Deleted Files Go?)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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