Our old tape drives have failed and we not using tapes for backup anymore. We still have a stack of DLT tapes with backups which may contain sensitive information like credit card numbers, social security numbers, etc.
How do I responsibly dispose of these backup tapes?
If I had a working drive I would be tempted to dd from /dev/urandom to the tape device, but the drives have failed. Would this be a good method if the drive was still working? What do you recommend I do with these tapes given that I have no working drive for them?
You could read the Guidelines for Media Sanitization (PDF) of the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
May I suggest Thermite?
Fire is your friend.
If the number of tapes is reasonable (<100) then there are any number of ways to permanently destroy them. Be creative.
If the number of tapes is much greater (>500) then I would contact a shredding company. Even if they don't handle tape media I'm sure they would have knowledge of those who would.
I'll tell you what we do
1- 2 minutes on the degaussing machine 2- sharp scissors and about 20 minutes to make confetti. alternately, a good office shredder.
When I first took over at my current job, we had well over 100 old backup tapes. I borrowed a huge magnet from the hardware store, the kind on wheels that is used to roll through a yard to pickup nails after a re-shingle. Anyway, I zapped them all with that. Then tossed them into the trash
I have always read that would work, but I havent tested it. I probably should have spot-tested a couple of them.
Not that this answers the question as asked by the OP, but for the benefits of anyone else reading this question, easy disposal is one of the fringe benefits of encrypting my backups: when I need to dispose of the tape, I tear the first few inches of tape off to make casual scanning difficult, then drop the rest into any old bin.
I was given a faulty 12" 1000W speaker with large heavy magnet. I put 4 tapes on at a time. Leave overnight. Strip the first 3 feet off by hand then bin them. Try your local disco equipment center for faulty speaker, should be able to get one with exposed magnets for £5. PS The tapes were encrypted.