The only reason MIDCON, your shredding company in Oklahoma City, is in business is to assist business and private citizens in the destruction of material you do not wish other to see, read or hold as evidence. This service is compliant with National Association of Information Destruction in America to ensure your sensitive material will always be kept private and no longer exist.
Why you should use the MIDCON Shredding Services
There are two major reasons to destroy your sensitive data and unwanted documents. One of them is for the security of your organization which will keep your business practices and processes safe from your competition. The other is to be Earth friendly since a majority of the material will be recycled and new products will be created from it.
What MIDCON can Destroy for You
Because sensitive material can be on paper, flash drives, disks and hard drives, where deploy multiple processes for the complete destruction of the information, data and the written word you desire to dispose of in the most destructive manner.
How we Destroy your Sensitive Material at MIDCON
For paper destruction we deploy a multiple step process. In the first step we shred the documents in a mechanical shredder. Once the documents are in minute pieces we then take it to a paper recycler where it is completely destroyed and used in the creation of new paper products. The material on the old documents is then impossible to retrieve by any means.
For the total destruction of electronic data, the process is a little more complex. The first step by any organization or private citizens is to reformat the hard drives and data collection devices once their usefulness is no longer necessary. There are some experts that claim a hardrives is clean after 35 swipes of a cleaning program.
The machine used by this shredding company in Oklahoma City actually destroys the hard drives, flash drives and disks physically. The minute pieces leftover after this process is then mixed with other material so it can never be reassembled again. The final step then melts down the components in a recycling process or it is mixed with tones of common trash never to be seen again.