Write protection

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IBM tape reel with white write ring in place, and an extra yellow ring.
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IBM tape reel with white write ring in place, and an extra yellow ring.
From top to bottom: an unprotected Type I cassette, an unprotected Type II, an unprotected Type IV, and a protected Type IV.
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From top to bottom: an unprotected Type I cassette, an unprotected Type II, an unprotected Type IV, and a protected Type IV.
A sheet of 5-1/4" floppy disk write protect tabs.
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A sheet of 5-1/4" floppy disk write protect tabs.

Write protection is any physical mechanism that prevents modification or erasure of valuable data on a device. Most commercial software, audio and video is sold pre-protected.

  • IBM 1/2 inch magnetic tape reels, introduced in the 1950s, had a circular groove on one side of the reel, into which a soft plastic ring had to be placed in order to write on the tape.
  • Audio cassettes and VHS videocassettes have tabs on the top/rear edge that can be broken off (uncovered = protected).
  • 8 and 5-1/4 inch floppies can have a notch on the right side (covered/not present = protected). A common practice with single-sided floppies was to punch a second notch on the opposite side of the disk to enable use of both sides of the media, creating a flippy disk.
  • 3-1/2 inch floppy disks have a sliding tab in a window on the right side (open = protected).
  • Iomega Zip disks were write protected using the IomegaWare software.
  • Syquest EZ-drive (135 & 250MB) disks were write protected using a small metal switch on the rear of the disk at the bottom.
  • 8mm, Hi8, and DV videocassettes have a sliding tab on the rear edge.
  • Iomega ditto tape cartridges had a small sliding tab on the top left hand corner on the front face of the cartridge.
  • USB keys and most other forms of solid state storage often have a small switch.

These mechanisms are intended to prevent only accidental data loss or attacks by computer viruses. A determined user can easily circumvent them either by covering a notch with adhesive tape or by creating one with a punch as appropriate, or sometimes by physically altering the media transport to ignore the write-protect mechanism.

Write-protection is typically enforced by the hardware. In the case of computer devices, attempting to violate it will return an error to the operating system while some tape recorders physically lock the record button when a write-protected cassette is present.