Borosilicate glass is much more resistant to chemicals and shocks than ordinary glass, which is why it is used in glassware for laboratories and in also in the better cooking vessels.
Except for hydrogen fluoride (a.k.a. hydrofluoric acid) and for hot and concentrated strong alkalies, biological or chemical agents will not have effects.
The main danger is either breaking the glass or its crystallization at high temperatures. A HDD is also unlikely to survive a drop on a hard floor and high temperatures would demagnetize it much more easily than affecting a glass stab.
Except for hydrogen fluoride (a.k.a. hydrofluoric acid) and for hot and concentrated strong alkalies, biological or chemical agents will not have effects.
The main danger is either breaking the glass or its crystallization at high temperatures. A HDD is also unlikely to survive a drop on a hard floor and high temperatures would demagnetize it much more easily than affecting a glass stab.