- Key Takeaways.
- Reddit user All-Seeing_Hands found 800GB on a “new” 1TB SSD, raising marketplace concerns.
- Kontakt and Reaktor files sparked piracy and malware fears across online storage sales.
- Seagate-linked counterfeit cases highlight why buyers should verify drives before use in 2026.
A Redditor who thought they were unboxing a pristine 1TB SSD instead plugged in a drive that looked like a producer’s stash, stuffed with hundreds of gigabytes of music tools like Kontakt and Reaktor. The surprise windfall quickly turned into a trust test for online marketplaces, raising questions about unchecked returns, pirated installs that need activation, and even malware bait. It also taps into a broader pattern of dodgy storage sales, from spoofed SMART data to outright fake hardware. Before celebrating a lucky haul, buyers might want to verify capacity, wipe the drive, and consider where they’re clicking “Buy.”
Thinking of buying a new hard drive? Check what might already be inside
Buying storage online feels routine until it is not. A recent purchase that looked perfectly normal at checkout turned odd the moment it was plugged in. The buyer expected a blank drive, then found hundreds of gigabytes of software sitting there, ready to launch. It is a reminder that returns, counterfeits, and mislabeled hardware are part of today’s e-commerce reality.
A hidden surprise in a brand-new SSD
A Reddit post from user All-Seeing_Hands described opening a package labeled as a new 1TB SSD, only to discover roughly 800GB of preloaded files. The haul was heavy on music tools more at home in a studio than a shrink-wrapped box. The thread quickly filled with buyers sharing similar close calls from marketplace listings that promised new, shipped fast, fulfilled tomorrow.
What was on the drive?
Instead of a clean volume, the buyer found legit-sounding titles like Kontakt ($299) and Reaktor ($199). At first glance, that looks like a bonus. In practice, it raises red flags. The software could be remnants from a returned unit that was never wiped. It could also be pirated content that still needs activation, or bait designed to coax a user into running malware.
Why risks like this are growing
Storage is an easy target because specs are abstract and packaging can look convincing. According to posts from repair pros and forensic hobbyists, some resellers have manipulated SMART data or firmware counters to hide prior wear. Others misrepresent the hardware entirely. In one viral case, a “2TB” bargain-drive bought for $10 was just an empty enclosure with spoofed electronics.
Counterfeit labels complicate things further. Even brands consumers trust, like Seagate, have had lookalike products circulating on large marketplaces. That does not mean the brand made a bad unit. It means third parties can mimic the logo, then ship something that only fails weeks later, outside a return window. The gap between listing and what lands on your desk is where the trouble lives.
Tips to avoid falling for faulty tech
There are a few simple guardrails that help. Buy storage from first-party stores or top-tier US retailers like Amazon, Best Buy, or Newegg, not from unknown marketplace sellers with thin histories. Check model numbers against the manufacturer’s site, then verify serials for warranty on arrival. Run a full format and a surface test before trusting the device with real data.
If anything looks off, return it quickly. Keep photos of packaging, labels, and SMART reports. After all, would you trust a “new” drive that arrives already full?