Paper shredder

Paper shredder with built-in wastebasket

A paper shredder is a mechanical device used to cut paper into either strips or fine particles. Government organizations, businesses, and private individuals use shredders to destroy private, confidential, or otherwise sensitive documents.

Invention

The first paper shredder is credited to prolific inventor Abbot Augustus Low, whose patent was filed on February 2, 1909.[1] His invention was however never manufactured.

Adolf Ehinger's paper shredder, based on a hand-crank pasta maker, was manufactured in 1935 in Germany. Supposedly he needed to shred his anti-Nazi propaganda to avoid the inquiries of the authorities.[2] Ehinger later marketed his shredders to government agencies and financial institutions converting from hand-crank to electric motor. Ehinger's company, EBA Maschinenfabrik, manufactured the first cross-cut paper shredders in 1959 and continues to do so to this day as EBA Krug & Priester GmbH & Co. in Balingen.

History of use

Until the mid-1980s, it was rare for paper shredders to be used by non-government entities.

A high-profile example of their use was when the U.S. embassy in Iran used shredders to reduce paper pages to strips before the embassy was taken over in 1979, but some documents were reconstructed from the strips, as detailed below.

After Colonel Oliver North told Congress that he used a Schleicher cross-cut model to shred Iran-Contra documents, sales for that company increased nearly 20 percent in 1987.[3]

Paper shredders became more popular among U.S. citizens with privacy concerns after the 1988 Supreme Court decision in California v. Greenwood; in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit the warrantless search and seizure of garbage left for collection outside of a home. Anti-burning laws also resulted in increased demand for paper shredding.

More recently, concerns about identity theft have driven increased personal use,[4] with the US Federal Trade Commission recommending that individuals shred financial documents before disposal.[5]

Information privacy laws like FACTA, HIPAA and the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act are driving shredder usage, as businesses and individuals take steps to securely dispose of confidential information.

Types

Multi-cut scissors used to shred paper

Shredders range in size and price from small and inexpensive units designed for a certain amount of pages, to large units used by commercial shredding services that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars and can shred millions of documents per hour. While the very smallest shredders may be hand-cranked, most shredders are electrically powered.

Shredders over time have added features to improve the shredder user's experience. Many now reject paper that is fed over capacity to avoid jams; others have safety features to reduce risks.[6][7] Some shredders designed for use in shared workspaces or department copy rooms have noise reduction.

Mobile shredding truck

Larger organisation or shredding services sometimes use "mobile shredding trucks", typically constructed as a box truck with an industrial-size paper shredder mounted inside and space for storage of the shredded materials. Such a unit may also offer the shredding of CDs, DVDs, hard drives, credit cards, and uniforms, among other things.

Kiosks

A shredding kiosk is an automated retail machine (or kiosk) that allows public access to a commercial or industrial-capacity paper shredder. This is an alternative solution to the use of a personal or business paper shredder, where the public can use a faster and more powerful shredder, paying for each shredding event rather than purchasing shredding equipment.

Services

Some companies outsource their shredding to shredding services. These companies either shred on-site, with mobile shredder trucks or have off-site shredding facilities. Documents that need to be destroyed are often placed in locked bins that are emptied periodically.

Shredding console

Shredding method, and output

As well as size and capacity, shredders are classified according to the method they use; and the size and shape of the shreds they produce.

The shredded remains of a National Lottery play slip.

Security levels

There are a number of standards covering the security levels of paper shredders, including:

DIN - Deutsches Institut für Normung

The previous DIN 32757 standard has now been replaced with DIN 66399. This is complex,[8] but can be summarized as below:

NSA/CSS

Destruction of evidence

There have been many instances where it is alleged that documents have been improperly or illegally destroyed by shredding, including:

Unshredding and forensics

An example of a shredded and reassembled document during Iran hostage crisis

In theory shredded documents should not be able to be reassembled and read. In practice the feasibility of this depends on, (a) how well the shredding has been done, and (b) the resources put into reconstruction. The cost benefit analysis will depend on whether it is a simple personal matter, corporate espionage, a criminal matter - or if national security is at stake.

Factors making reconstruction more likely include not only the cutting method, but also the orientation of the material when fed, and whether the shredded material is further randomized afterwards. Even without a full reconstruction, in some cases useful information can be obtained by forensic analysis of the paper, ink, and cutting method.

Reconstruction examples

Forensic identification

The individual shredder that was used to destroy a given document may be sometimes be of forensic interest. Shredders display certain device-specific characteristics, "fingerprints", like the exact spacing of the blades, the degree and pattern of their wear. By closely examining the shredded material, the minute variations of size of the paper strips and the microscopic marks on their edges may be able to be linked to a specific machine.[20] (c.f. the forensic identification of typewriters.)

Recycling of waste

The resulting shredded paper can be recyled in a number of ways, including:

See also

References

  1. Abbot Augustus Low Waste-paper receptacle February 2, 1909 Patent filing
  2. Woestendiek, John (February 10, 2002). "The Compleat History of SHREDDING". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  3. "Business notes office equipment". Time. 1988-02-29. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  4. "About Identity Theft". US FTC website.
  5. "Fighting Back Against Identity Theft". US FTC website.
  6. "Paper Shredder Safety Alert" (PDF) (Press release). U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. 11 June 2007.
  7. "Paper Shredder Danger". Snopes.com. Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  8. "New times, new storage media, new standards". http://www.hsm.eu/. Retrieved 22 February 2017. External link in |publisher= (help)
  9. "NSA/CSS EVALUATED PRODUCTS LIST for HIGH SECURITY CROSSCUT PAPER SHREDDERS" (PDF).
  10. 1 2 Walsh, Lawrence (August 4, 1993). "Vol. I: Investigations and prosecutions". Final report of the independent counsel for Iran/Contra matters. Independent Council for Iran/Contra Matters. Retrieved 15 May 2009.
  11. "Interim Report March 2005" (PDF). Retrieved 2009-07-27.
  12. Eizenstat, Stuart (2003). Imperfect Justice. New York: PublicAffairs. ISBN 1-58648-110-X. Page 94
  13. Eizenstat p 94, 95
  14. Eizenstat p 95
  15. Swiss parliament: Parliamentary Initiative 96.434: Bundesbeschluss betreffend die historische und rechtliche Untersuchung des Schicksals der infolge der nationalsozialistischen Herrschaft in die Schweiz gelangten Vermögenswerte; in German. Entry in force December 14, 1996. This edict was the legal foundation of the Bergier commission, constituted on December 19, 1996. Articles 4, 5, and 7 made the willful destruction or withholding of documents relating to orphaned assets illegal. On the dates given, see Chronology: Switzerland in World War II — Detailed Overview of the years 1994-1996. URLs last accessed 2006-10-30.
  16. Dānishjūyān-i Musalmān-i Payraw-i Khaṭṭ-i Imām, Dānishjūyan-i Musalmān-i Payraw-i Khaṭṭ-i Imām (1980). Documents from the U.S. Espionage Den. Published by Muslim Students Following the Line of the Iman.
  17. "National Association for Information Destruction". naidonline.org.
  18. Heingartner, Douglas (2003-07-17). "Back Together Again". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  19. "Darpa Shredder Challenge". Darpa.mil. U S. Department of Defense. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  20. Jack Brassil (2002-08-02). "Tracing the Source of a Shredded Document" (PDF). Hewlett-Packard. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  21. bOnline LTD. "Wilki Engineering manufactures bespoke shredding machines & balers". wilkiengineering.co.uk.
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