"This product is a scam, and Walmart should be ashamed of itself..."

Liar, Liar

This week, a security researcher who goes by the moniker Ray Redacted dug up listings for a fake hard drive that pretends to store an impressive 30 terabytes, but actually only holds a tiny fraction of that — and, worse, writes new files on top of old files, effectively shredding users' data.

That would be sleazy even on an obscure corner of the online electronics world. But as Redacted noticed, the giant retailer Walmart had started selling the scammy hard drive online, where buyers were expressing horror at the scheme.

"Walmart should get smarter than to sell products like this," wrote one buyer. "I thought I was buying a 8 terabyte SSD drive, for $28, and this piece of garbage does not work, in any way, shape or form. This product is a scam, and Walmart should be ashamed of itself to sell them."

The Guts

Redcated bought one of the hard drivers, and inside he found two microSD cards literally hot glued onto a circuit board. After further tests, Ray found that the fake drive uses adapted firmware to trick unlucky customers into thinking they actually had all those juice terabytes.

However, instead of actually storing data, the cards only kept a copy of file names the user tried to back up, so everything looked fine until someone actually tried to access a file.

After the story got picked up by Ars Technica, Walmart dropped the scammy product from its site. But dozens of similarly suspicious-looking products remain on AliExpress, some claiming to hold as much as 60TB.

Considering a single 1TB Samsung hard drive runs more than $100 on Amazon, it's probably best to stay away from ultra-cheap drives.

Or as the storage sleuth Redacted quipped: "Have you ever heard the expression 'if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is?'"

More on corporate buffoonery: Amazon Makes Its Employees a Bunch of Stupid, Made-Up Words


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