Cybersecurity 101back-iconWhat is Remote wipe?

What is Remote wipe?

Remote wipe is a security feature that allows administrators to remotely erase data from a device when they lose it, someone steals it, or it becomes compromised. It helps organizations protect sensitive information by preventing unauthorized access to corporate data stored on endpoints.

Organizations increasingly rely on mobile devices, laptops, and tablets to support a distributed workforce. While these devices improve productivity, they also create security risks when users lose them, attackers steal them, or unauthorized individuals access them.

How does it work?

Remote wipe allows IT teams to take action without requiring physical access to a device. Administrators typically issue the wipe command through an endpoint management platform, and the device executes it when it connects to the internet.

A typical remote wipe process includes:

  • A device is reported lost, stolen, or compromised.
  • An administrator initiates a remote wipe command.
  • The command is sent to the device.
  • The device receives and executes the wipe action.
  • Corporate or device data is erased.
Step Description
Incident Identification Device is identified as a security risk
Command Initiation Administrator triggers a wipe action
Command Delivery Device receives the wipe request
Data Removal Selected or complete data is erased
Security Restoration Sensitive information is protected from misuse

Why is it important?

Lost or stolen devices can expose sensitive business information, customer records, credentials, and corporate applications. It helps organizations reduce the impact of these incidents and maintain data security.

Key benefits include:

  • Protection of sensitive corporate data.
  • Reduced risk of data breaches.
  • Support for regulatory compliance.
  • Improved device security management.
  • Faster incident response.
  • Enhanced support for remote work environments.

Organizations commonly use remote wipe as part of broader mobile device management (MDM) and unified endpoint management (UEM) strategies.

Types of Remote Wipe

Different organizations have different data protection requirements. Modern endpoint management platforms often provide multiple wipe options to address various use cases.

Common remote wipe types include:

  • Full wipe: Erases all data and restores the device to factory settings.
  • Selective wipe: Removes corporate data while preserving personal information.
  • Enterprise wipe: Removes managed applications, profiles, and business data.
  • Retirement wipe: Clears organizational data when administrators decommission a device.

The available options may vary depending on the device platform and management model.

How Hexnode UEM enables Remote Wipe

Remote wipe is one of the core security capabilities provided by Hexnode UEM. It allows administrators to protect organizational data when users lose devices, attackers steal them, organizations retire them, or they no longer meet security requirements.

Hexnode UEM provides centralized device management and remote actions that help IT teams respond quickly to security incidents across managed endpoints.

Key capabilities include:

  • Full device wipe: Remotely erase all data and restore supported devices to factory settings.
  • Corporate wipe: Remove corporate data, profiles, applications, and configurations from managed devices while preserving personal data on supported platforms.
  • Remote device actions: Initiate security actions directly from the management console.
  • Device tracking and management: Maintain visibility into managed devices and respond to potential security incidents.
  • Policy-driven security: Combine remote wipe with compliance and security policies to protect corporate data.

By enabling administrators to remotely remove sensitive information from managed devices, Hexnode UEM helps organizations strengthen data protection and support endpoint security initiatives.

FAQs

In most cases, no. Once the wipe process begins and completes, it permanently erases the data, and users cannot recover it without backups.

Typically, yes. The device generally needs network connectivity to receive and execute the wipe command.