Cloud computing shares data and processing for organizations from remote locations. Though authenticated systems are in place, hackers access secured data and delete or modify it. All current software-based verification can be processed with one-bit-return protocol: the delete sequence achieves data destruction causing revenue loss or system catastrophe. In certain cases, a deleted record in the cloud, could be salvaged by a hacker. This is especially challenging when the deletion database is compressed within a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) and the user does not have access to the private code. This paper, discusses how to clear hidden data using public authentication. The key indication in this proposal is based on a “trust-but-verify” pattern, which is usually relevant to many security glitches but was fundamentally despicable in the area of deleting protected data. The objective is that the deleted record must be purged permanently from the database. Finally, some evidence to determine its feasibility of SSA has also been discussed.