See also: Magneto-optical drive
WORM drives preceded the invention of the CD-R, DVD-R and BD-R. An example was the IBM 3363.1 These drives typically used either a 5.1 in (13 cm) or a 12 in (30 cm) disc in a cartridge, with an ablative optical layer that could be written to only once, and were often used in places like libraries that needed to store large amounts of data. Interfaces to connect these to PCs also existed.
Punched cards and paper tape are obsolete WORM media. Although any unpunched area of the medium could be punched after the first write of the medium, doing so was virtually never useful. Read-only memory (ROM) is also a WORM medium. Such memory may contain the instructions to a computer to read the operating system from another storage device such as a hard disk. The non-technical end-user, however, cannot write the ROM even once but considers it part of the unchangeable computing platform.
WORM was utilized for Broker-dealer records within the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
The CD-R, DVD-R and BD-R optical discs for computers are common WORM devices. On these discs, no region of the disc can be recorded a second time. Through packet writing, which uses the Universal Disk Format (UDF) file system, these discs often use a file system that permits additional files, and even revised versions of a file by the same name, to be recorded in a different region of the disc. To the user, the disc appears to allow additions and revisions until all the disk space is used.
The SD card and microSD card spec allows for multiple forms of write-protection. The most common form, only available when using a full-size SD card, provides a physical write protection switch which allows the user to advise the host card reader to disallow write access. This does not protect the data on the card if the card reader hardware is not built to respect the write protection switch.2
Multiple vendors beginning in the early 2000s developed Magnetic WORM devices. These archival grade storage devices utilize a variation of RAID and magnetic storage technologies to secure data from unauthorized alteration or modification at both the hardware and software levels. As the cost of magnetic (and solid-state) storage has decreased, so has the cost for these archival storage technologies. These technologies are almost always integrated directly into a content/document management system that manages retention schedules and access controls, along with document level history.34
There are multiple vendors providing Magnetic Storage technologies including NetApp,5 EMC Centera,6 KOM Networks,7 and others. In 2013, GreenTec-USA, Inc. developed WORM hard disk drives in capacities of 3 TB and greater. Prevention of rewrite is done at the physical disk level and cannot be modified or overridden by the attached computer.89
In recent years[when?] there has been a renewed interest in WORM based on organic components, such as PEDOT:PSS1011 or other polymers such as PVK12 or PCz.13 Organic WORM devices, considered organic memory, could be used as memory elements for low-power RFID tags.14
"IBM 3363 optical WORM drive". November 21, 1987 – via Computer History Museum Archive. https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102671161 ↩
"SD Specifications Part 1 Physical Layer Simplified Specification" (PDF). version 3.10, Part 1, Physical Layer, section 4.3.6" Write Protect Management". Retrieved 2019-04-11. https://www.sdcard.org/cms/wp-content/themes/sdcard-org/dl.php?f=Part1PhysicalLayerSimplifiedSpecificationVer9.10Fin_20231201.pdf ↩
http://www.aiim.org/documents/standards/ARP1-2009.pdf [dead link] http://www.aiim.org/documents/standards/ARP1-2009.pdf ↩
"Analysis, Selection, and Implementation of Electronic Document Management Systems (EDMS)" (PDF). Association for Information and Image Management. 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2009-12-29. http://www.aiim.org/documents/standards/ARP1-2009.pdf ↩
"SnapLock Compliance Software". http://www.netapp.com/us/products/protection-software/snaplock.aspx ↩
EMC Centers emc.com http://www.emc.com/collateral/hardware/data-sheet/c931-emc-centera-cas-ds.pdf ↩
"Products Overview". Archived from the original on 2012-02-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20120217203447/http://www.komnetworks.com/products.html ↩
"GreenTec-USA, Inc. WORM Read Only Disk Drives" http://www.greentec-usa.com http://www.greentec-usa.com ↩
"Best Practices to Secure Data from Modification: Eliminating the Risk to Online Content" http://greentec-usa.com/wp/GreenTec-WORM-Whitepaper.pdf http://greentec-usa.com/wp/GreenTec-WORM-Whitepaper.pdf ↩
Möller, Sven; Perlov, Craig; Jackson, Warren; Taussig, Carl; Forrest, Stephen R. (2003). "A polymer/Semiconductor write-once read-many-times memory". Nature. 426 (6963): 166–169. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..166M. doi:10.1038/nature02070. PMID 14614502. S2CID 4337352. /wiki/Bibcode_(identifier) ↩
Smith, Shawn; Forrest, Stephen R. (14 June 2004). "Smith and Forrest "A low switching voltage organic-on-inorganic heterojunction memory element utilizing a conductive polymer fuse on a doped silicon substrate"". Applied Physics Letters. 84 (24): 5019–5021. doi:10.1063/1.1763632. Retrieved 21 November 2024. https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apl/article-abstract/84/24/5019/508686/A-low-switching-voltage-organic-on-inorganic?redirectedFrom=fulltext ↩
Lin, Jian; Ma, Dongge (3 September 2008). "Lin and Ma "Realization of write-once-read-many-times memory devices based on poly(N-vinylcarbazole) by thermally annealing"". Applied Physics Letters. 93 (9). doi:10.1063/1.2975157. Retrieved 21 November 2024. https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apl/article-abstract/93/9/093505/765130/Realization-of-write-once-read-many-times-memory?redirectedFrom=fulltext ↩
Teo, E. Y. H.; Zhang, C.; Lim, S. L.; Kang, E.; Chan, D. S. H.; Zhu, C. (May 2009). "An Organic-Based Diode–Memory Device With Rectifying Property for Crossbar Memory Array Applications". IEEE Electron Device Letters. 30 (5): 487–489. Bibcode:2009IEDL...30..487Y. doi:10.1109/LED.2009.2017387. ISSN 0741-3106. S2CID 19858062. /wiki/IEEE_Electron_Device_Letters ↩
"Holst Centre reports major step towards organic RFID" http://www2.imec.be/be_en/press/imec-news/archive-2009/holst-centre-reports-major-step-towards-organic-rfid.html ↩