Wait - so instead of wiping the drives, they throw the computers away? With the sensitive data still intact / recoverable?
Yeah, real secure.
Stuff in the corporate world always seem to remind me of Dilbert in one way or another.
Depends on who gets the dumpster afterwards. We have recyclers here in the city that will give you a certificate of guaranteed destruction, including your hard drives. So it's still cheaper than wiping the data and donating them. Afterall, the OP never specifically said these computers were on their way to the dump just that they were getting trashed.
I've encountered all sorts of ---That which is odiferous and causeth plants to grow--- like this. Home Depot would rather destroy a $5,000+ riding lawnmower because it's missing a simple service panel than order a new one from the manufacture or sell it at a reduced price. The logic? They were required by contract from the manufacturer to do so.
At Hewlett Packard, they crushed hundreds (thousands?) of "obsolete" industrial grade printers because a new model was developed. Absolutely nothing was wrong. There was still software support and ink being made for them, they just couldn't be sold. Rather than remove the serial numbers and donate them to needy local schools, they destroyed them. Their logic? HP didn't want to give free support to someone who didn't pay for them.
At Radio Shack, I was always forced to dump electronics at every inventory. Sometimes it would be too old to sell. Other times they would be missing parts. Some are unclaimed by customers (when rat shack used to offer a repair service). Some were non-functional (fuse type repair). The logic was that Rat Shack wasn't in the "used" electronics business like Hfe.