Andrew Rowlands
Well-known member

Follow up to the thread from last year of NicoleB's data loss problem.
The WD ext. drives with 'Smartware' seem to be a black hole for your data should anything go wrong. Please buy an alternative drive - without any 'useful' software attached or ready to install from it.
The most recent failure I've come across is this one, there have been others in between.
My view: the WD Smartware (auto-installing on first connect) effectively encrypts and compresses data as it's written, if anything goes t*t's up, all data is lost.
On the above link: I think the password reference here is indicative of the electronics in the drive being shot, nothing to do with the absence or otherwise of a real password.
If you have one of these drives, replace it with a vanilla ext. drive (or two!), only power up/connect them for data transfer/backup, store them safely where they can't be damaged/stolen/knocked over.
The WD ext. drives with 'Smartware' seem to be a black hole for your data should anything go wrong. Please buy an alternative drive - without any 'useful' software attached or ready to install from it.
The most recent failure I've come across is this one, there have been others in between.
My view: the WD Smartware (auto-installing on first connect) effectively encrypts and compresses data as it's written, if anything goes t*t's up, all data is lost.
On the above link: I think the password reference here is indicative of the electronics in the drive being shot, nothing to do with the absence or otherwise of a real password.
If you have one of these drives, replace it with a vanilla ext. drive (or two!), only power up/connect them for data transfer/backup, store them safely where they can't be damaged/stolen/knocked over.