![]() Both the options I suggest here start with writing Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 Desktop LiveUSB to the disk instead (20.04 recommended). Instead of writing DBAN to a USB, there are tools you can use already in Linux, and can erase data with ease like DBAN does. However, I may have an alternative to DBAN, if you're interested: Use an Ubuntu installation / Live USB disk as a base, then use tools in Linux already to erase the disk. You can take the approach of switching your BIOS/system to MBR, run DBAN, then switch to UEFI again. DBAN is a MBR-only ISO and as such does NOT have a UEFI bootable mode - it is fairly old even though it still works, and doesn't have a UEFI boot option in it.
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