Have you ever wondered where the deleted files go from PC???


Where the Deleted files go from PC ?

We delete some files from our PC or laptop, or smartphone almost every day. We delete files that are no longer needed to save storage. But after deleting the file, does the file cease to exist? Have you ever wondered where the movie you deleted from the hard drive a few days ago, or the picture was taken on your smartphone that was not good was immediately deleted? Today I will discuss this issue.

Where the Deleted files go from PC???

To understand this, we must first think outside the computer. Can we delete anything in real life? Think about it. Suppose you have a page of the paper. Can you delete it if you try? Many may say that you will tear the paper into pieces, or many may say that you will burn the paper to ashes. But think about it, is it really deleted? Did it really disappear?

If you say yes, then you are wrong. You have only changed the form or condition of the paper. It used to be paper, but after burning,, it turned to ashes. There was no change in the paper when it was torn. Only changed into many pieces of it. When it is soaked in water, it turns into wet paper. But you can't completely erase or delete the paper. This is not the case with computer deleted files, but it is somewhat similar to real life, although it is technically possible to delete computer files.

The process of deleting a file on a desktop or laptop starts when you confirm by sending the file to the Recycle Bin folder by confirming by clicking the delete option from the file's context menu. Even then, the file remains in a temporary directory on your drive and occupies space on your drive, but the file is not shown to you by Windows. 

But even then, if you check the drive properties, you will see that there is just as much space in the drive as there was before. That means the file is still there. In this case, once you restore the file from the Recycle Bin, you will be able to view and use the file again. But what happens when you delete a file from the recycle bin so that it can no longer be #restored? This time, however, you are given backspace on the drive that occupied the file. But what happens to the file? Where does the file go?

When you delete the Recycle Bin file, the file occupies as much space in your drive but is not literally empty. That space is marked as empty. Marking this blank makes that space available for any new data or new files. Space where the file was, was emptied, but the file has not been moved, or the file is no longer available. Only the pointers are gone. Pointers are another type of data on your computer that points to or points to a directory of files in your memory.

When the file is deleted, the computer only removes the references in your file. If you remove the file reference, the computer can no longer read the file. To understand the matter a little better, it is necessary to say, deleting a file from an operating system, deleting a chapter from a book by marking a chapter as blank. The same is true of computers. That is, when the computer reads your directory, the computer takes the place of the deleted files as empty as those places are marked as empty.

Now you may think that it is possible to recover deleted files easily since they are still there. That's right. Not easy, but we all know that it is possible to get back deleted files even if it is difficult. Special data recovery tools use your permission to locate hard drive directories marked as empty or empty. These tools can often find and bring back most of your deleted files from that space since the files' space is only marked as empty or Empty, but the file has not gone anywhere yet. Your deleted files will remain on the hard drive until the space in that file is reserved for another new file or the space in which your file was located is overwritten by a new data or file.

Now you may ask, if the file goes away just by overwriting it, then why doesn't the computer do it in the first step? Because it is much easier to just mark the file space as empty or remove the file's reference. If you want to delete a file completely so that it is no longer possible to recover #, you need to completely overwrite the space reserved for the file with new data. This can be done using a low-level format or other utility. With the help of these utilities, you may overwrite the space of those deleted files by many 0s or overwrite them with something else so that it can never be recovered. Still, even then, there is no 100% guarantee that your file has been deleted. Here comes another issue, which is the "bad sector."

Bad sectors are some of the directories of your computer that you can never access. Making some changes to these directories may make your PC unusable or cause some other damage. However, this means that the files that are in these bad sectors will never be deleted.

Suppose you are an officer of the US military or some other powerful group, and you have a lot of necessary secret data of this group on your PC that no one else has the right to know. What will you or the US military do when you need to delete this data? Will only delete? No. Since it is not possible to completely delete a file so that no one can ever get access to the deleted file, the only way to ensure that your hard drive or PC or memory or CPU is destroyed is to delete the file so that no one ever has access to the memory. Can't

Countries like the US, Africa, Japan, etc., often send their electronic waste (data that they do not want to have a 1% chance of recovery) to a place called Agbogbloshie in Ghana to burn it. This place in Ghana is known as the World’s Digital Dumping Ground. Here are all these memories or hard drives

Who are burned so that there is no 1% chance of recovering them? You will be surprised to know that it is also possible to get the files back from here. Various cybercriminals worldwide or some other people claim that they have recovered many data from this dumping ground in Ghana. These data have found millions of dollars in agreements, various types of valuable formulas, and much more.

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