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Aethyr

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  1. Actually, Eraser was doing its job. All Recuva could find was what Eraser had overwritten your files with. If your files were still recoverable in the original form, that would be a cause for concern. There is no way a file can be un-written. It can only be overwritten, so, when Eraser has finished working, there is just random (= nonsense) data where the file used to be.
  2. I wasn't aware CCleaner had this option. My question is, does this feature renders my Eraser redundant?
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