file extension RX - E3 Security Kit prescription file
File extension RX description:
RX file suffix is associated with E3 Security Kit. Prescription file.
Associated applications to file extension RX:
Company / developer:
Radsoft
The E3 Security Kit is the XPT's privacy toolkit. At the core is the
SPX shredding engine.
The E3 tools - suitable for both private and corporate use - operate
with E3's proprietary scripting engine which makes it possible to get
into (by definition) all possible nooks and crannies of a Windows hard
drive. It's ideal for everyone from home users who want to shred files
or disks with a single mouse click to system administrators tasked with
establishing automated privacy routines on a corporate-wide basis.
No matter you're simply trying to trim your disk or whether you're
selling your old computer and want to know how to erase your disk so
the new owner can't recover your files, E3 is the file shredder and
disk shredder software you need. It gets at all the nooks and crannies
that simply deleting a file ignores.
You already know deleted files aren't really gone - and you probably
know that simply overwriting the data isn't enough to stop someone from
getting their hands on it. And you may or may not know that simply
overwriting files with 0s or 1s isn't going to do the trick either -
hard drives are 'analog' in nature and don't care much about 'digital'
overwrites.
To do the very best hard drive cleaning possible without breaking and
burning the disk, you need to do more than erase the data - you need to
shred it. E3 does precisely that, in the most thorough manner possible.
E3 utilizes the Gutmann method of file shredding. It's not disk
overwrite software - overwriting data doesn't secure it. You need a
hard core disk shredder. Hard drives are analog and they always retain
'ghosts' of previous writes. E3's SPX Gutmann engine uses the
combinations needed to ensure these analog devices 'blur' their ghost
layers as much as possible. Nothing is as safe as incineration - but on
a daily basis, with media that will be used again and again, the 35
Gutmann passes (and the additional 4 SPX passes - the so called '39
Steps') are the next best thing.
