SCHEDULE 14A

                                 (RULE 14a-101)

             INFORMATION REQUIRED IN CONSENT SOLICITATION STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

   Consent Solicitation Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                     Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. 3)

Filed by the registrant [X]

Filed by a party other than the registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:
[X] Preliminary consent solicitation statement. [ ] Confidential, for use of the
                                                   Commission only (as permitted
                                                   by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)).
[ ] Definitive consent solicitation statement.

[ ] Definitive additional materials.

[ ] Soliciting material under Rule14a-12.

                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
 ______________________________________________________________________________

    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)

Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):

[ ]No fee required.

[ [Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6 (i) (4) and 0-11.

         (1)     Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
________________________________________________________________________________

         (2)      Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
________________________________________________________________________________

         (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction completed
pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee
is calculated and state how it was determined):
________________________________________________________________________________

         (4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
________________________________________________________________________________

         (5)      Total fee paid:
________________________________________________________________________________

[X] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
________________________________________________________________________________

[ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or
the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

(1)      Amount Previously Paid:



(2)      Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:



(3)      Filing Party:



(4)      Date Filed:






                             PERFECTDATA CORPORTION
                          1445 East Los Angeles Avenue
                              Simi Valley, CA 93065


                                                                   July __, 2004





  Dear PerfectData Shareholder:

         The Board of Directors is seeking  your  consent,  in lieu of holding a
meeting,  to (1)  consummating  the sale to Spray  Products  Corporation  of our
current business  operations and (2)  reincorporating  our Company as a Delaware
corporation.

         Spray, which has been in recent years the major supplier to our Company
of  compressed  gas  dusters,  which  product  represented  more than 85% of our
Company's  sales  during the fiscal year which ended  March 31,  2004,  has been
acting,  since  November 1, 2003, as the manager for the  fulfillment  of orders
from the Company's customers.  The purchase price will be an amount equal to the
sum of the  value of the then  inventory,  the  amount of  collectible  accounts
receivable  and  $80,000,  less the amount of trade  payables  being  assumed by
Spray. Our reasons for seeking your approval and further details relating to the
sale are set forth in the annexed Consent Solicitation Statement.

         Although this sale, when closed,  will leave us without any operations,
we  believe  that  our  Company  will  remain  an  attractive  candidate  for an
acquisition or merger.  Despite our efforts prior to our arrangements with Spray
to increase  revenues and decrease  expenses,  these operations had continued to
result in a loss,  thereby  reducing our cash  position,  which is our principal
asset. As a public company, having terminated the operations which only resulted
in losses,  with a strong cash position (i.e., in excess of $1,500,000) and with
improved stock market conditions  generally,  PerfectData  Corporation can still
consummate,  in our opinion,  a transaction with a private company with on-going
operations that will give a "new life" to our Company. We were disappointed that
the proposed  transaction  with SuperCom Ltd., an Israeli  company,  terminated,
but, for the reasons described in the annexed Consent Solicitation Statement, we
believe such termination to be in the best interests of our Company and you, our
shareholders.  We are now  actively  pursuing  the task of  obtaining a suitable
acquisition or merger partner.

         Almost every potential  acquisition or merger candidate to whom we have
spoken has requested that we reincorporate our Company so that it is governed by
the laws of Delaware and not those of California  as it currently  is.  SuperCom
even made this a condition  precedent to our closing a transaction  with it. Our
reasons for seeking your  approval of the  reincorporation  and a comparison  of
California  and Delaware law are set forth in the annexed  Consent  Solicitation
Statement.

         We are using the consent procedure in lieu of calling a meeting because
it is less  expensive  than  calling a meeting  and will enable us, once we have
secured  your  approval,  to close with  Spray  sooner,  i.e.,  the day after we
receive  consents  from  the  holders  of  at  least  34.95%  of  our  Company's
outstanding  shares,  but not sooner  than ten days after we mail this letter to
you. We already  have  received  consents  aggregating  15.05% of our  Company's
outstanding  shares from  directors,  officers  and a trust for which the senior
partner of our counsel acts as Trustee to approval of  consummating  the sale to
Spray and the reincorporating our Company as a Delaware corporation.

         Please  execute  the  enclosed  consent  and return it  promptly to our
Transfer Agent in the enclosed self-addressed prepaid envelope. This will enable
us to close with Spray and  concentrate our efforts on seeking an acquisition or
merger candidate.  If you have any questions,  please do not hesitate to contact
us as provided in the annexed Consent Solicitation Statement.

                                            Sincerely yours,

                                            Harris A. Shapiro
                                            Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
                                            For the Board of Directors




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                          1445 East Los Angeles Avenue
                                    Suite 208
                              Simi Valley, CA 93065

                         CONSENT SOLICITATION STATEMENT

         This Consent Solicitation Statement is furnished in connection with the
solicitation  by the  Board of  Directors  of  PerfectData  Corporation,  or the
"Company,"  of consents  from the  Company's  shareholders  in lieu of holding a
meeting,  pursuant to Section 603 of the  California  General  Corporation  Law,
approving  (1) the sale by the Company of its  current  business  operations  to
Spray Products Corporation,  or "Spray," on the terms and conditions hereinafter
described in this Consent Solicitation  Statement and (2) the reincorporation of
the Company as a Delaware corporation. Your attention is directed to the section
"Terms of Sale" under the caption  "Proposed Sale  Transaction"  for information
relating to the terms and  conditions  of the proposed  sale to Spray and to the
caption "Authorize the Reincorporation of the Company as a Delaware Corporation"
for  information  relating  to  the  reincorporation   proposal.   This  Consent
Solicitation  Statement  and the enclosed form of consent are first being mailed
on or about  ___________,  July __,  2004 to holders of record of the  Company's
Common Stock,  no par value per share, or the "Common Stock," as of the close of
business on  ___________,  July __, 2004,  or the "Record  Date," which has been
fixed,  as  described  in  the  second   paragraph  under  the  caption  "Voting
Securities," as the record date for the  determination of the shareholders to be
solicited for consents to this proposal.

                               SUMMARY TERM SHEET

         For  a  more  complete   description  of  the  terms  of  the  proposed
transaction  with Spray  summarized  below,  your  attention  is directed to the
section "Terms of Sale" under the caption  "Proposed Sale  Transaction"  in this
consent solicitation  statement.  You may also read the asset purchase agreement
which is attached as Appendix A, and an amendment  which is attached as Appendix
B, to this consent solicitation  statement. To facilitate your finding such more
detailed description,  we have indicated in this summary a reference to the page
in this consent  solicitation  statement,  as, for example, CSS p. 1, and to the
page in the agreement as, for example, APA p. 1.

o        Seller:                   PerfectData Corporation

o        Buyer:                    Spray Products Corporation

o        Assets to be sold:        All inventory, certain books and records,
                                   goodwill, accounts receivables, equipment and
                                   intellectual property of the seller.
                                   [CSS p. 4; APA p. A-1 and A-2]

o        Purchase price:           The sum of the value of inventories,
                                   collectible accounts receivables
                                   and $80,000, less the value of the trade
                                   payables, all to be determined at the
                                   closing.
                                   [CSS p. 4; APA p. A-2 and A-3]

o        Closing:                  The closing will occur on the day following
                                   the seller receiving consents from
                                   shareholders holding a majority of its
                                   outstanding shares of its common stock (but
                                   not earlier than 10 days after this consent
                                   solicitation statement is sent to
                                   shareholders).
                                   [CSS p. 6; APA p. A-7]

o        Fulfillment Manager       Since November 1, 2003, the buyer has been
         prior to closing:         acting as the manager for the fulfillment of
                                   orders of the seller"s products.  As
                                   compensation for its compensation for its
                                   services the seller has been paying the buyer
                                   7.5% of the "net sales" (as such term is
                                   defined) of the products sold.  The seller
                                   has been responsible for all shipping and
                                   freight charges.
                                   [CSS p. 6; APA p. A-10]

o        Termination:              In the event either party terminates the
                                   agreement because of the other party's
                                   violation, or, if the other party is unable
                                   to close, the other party shall pay the
                                   terminating party $100,000.
                                   [CSS p. 6; APA p. A-9 and A-10]

                                VOTING SECURITIES

         On the Record Date,  6,209,530  shares of the Common Stock were issued,
outstanding  and entitled to consent.  There is no other class of capital  stock
currently  issued  and  outstanding  and,  accordingly,  no  other  class  to be
solicited  for  consents  to  the  sale  and  reincorporation   proposals.  Each
shareholder  of record is entitled to cast, in person or by proxy,  one vote for
each  share of the  Common  Stock  held by such  shareholder  as of the close of
business on the Record Date. This consent  solicitation  will become  effective,
and the sale and reincorporation  proposals approved,  when the Company receives
consents from the holders of shares of the Common Stock representing more than a
majority of the  outstanding  shares of the Common  Stock (i.e.,  consents  with
respect to at least 3,104,766  shares,  of which, as indicated in the succeeding
paragraph, consents as to 934,716 shares have already been received). California
law does not require that we specify a date by which  consents must be received;
however,  the Board has directed that solicitation of additional  consents cease
if the required  consents  have not been  received by August __, 2004 (i.e.,  30
days after mailing).

         All of the directors and executive officers of the Company have already
given their consents to approval of the sale and reincorporation  proposals with
respect to an  aggregate  of 506,843  shares of the Common Stock which they own.
Receipt of their consents on July __, 2004, by the Secretary of the Company made
that date the Record  Date  pursuant  to  Section  701(b)(2)  of the  California
General Corporation Law. The Company has also received a consent from William B.
Wachtel,  as Trustee of  Digital  Trust,  with  respect to 427,873  shares.  For
information  as to this  shareholder,  your attention is directed to Note (3) to
the table under the caption "Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and
Management"  elsewhere  in this  Consent  Solicitation  Statement.  The Company,
accordingly,  has received  consents  from an aggregate  of 934,716  shares,  or
15.05% of the shares of the Common Stock outstanding as of the Record Date.

         As the Company previously publicly announced, the holders of a majority
of the then  outstanding  shares of the Common Stock had agreed,  pursuant to an
agreement  dated as of July  15,  2003,  or the  "Shareholders'  Agreement,"  to
authorize the Company to sell its inventory,  intellectual property and business
operations.  This agreement resulted from discussions held in June 2003 with two
major  shareholders  not affiliated  with  management,  which  discussions  were
initiated by them,  as to what actions the Company  should take,  regardless  of
whether or not the then proposed  merger  transaction  with  SuperCom,  Ltd., an
Israeli  company,  or  "SuperCom,"  was  consummated.  The  consensus  of  these
discussions  was  that  it was in the  best  interest  of the  Company  and  its
shareholders  to find a buyer  and to sell  the  Company's  current  operations.
Because  over  eight  months  had  elapsed   since  these   discussions,   which
contemplated  prompt  action being taken to  consummate a sale,  and because the
proposed  SuperCom  transaction  (which had as a condition  precedent to closing
sale  of  these   operations)   had   terminated,   the  Company  advised  these
non-management shareholders that the Company released them from their commitment
to consent, when requested,  which they had given in the Shareholders  Agreement
and that, accordingly,  these shareholders may now consent or not consent to the
sale proposal as to which the Board is seeking consents pursuant to this Consent
Solicitation  Statement.  While the Board believes that these major shareholders
may still  consent,  they are no longer  obligated to do so by the  Shareholders
Agreement.  The Shareholders Agreement related only to the sale proposal and not
the reincorporation proposal as well.

         Consents  will be  voted  as  indicated  in this  Consent  Solicitation
Statement  and the  enclosed  consent.  Shares  presented  by properly  executed
consents will be voted in accordance with any specifications  made therein.  You
may  revoke a  previously  given  consent  by  delivering  a  written  notice of
revocation  to the  Company  (Attention:  Irene  J.  Marino,  Secretary)  at its
principal  executive  office at any time prior to the  receipt by the Company of
consents  sufficient to approve either or both of the two proposals as described
in the third preceding paragraph.  The principal executive office of the Company
is located at the address in the heading to this Proxy Statement.

         The rules of the New York State  Exchange,  Inc.,  the  American  Stock
Exchange LLC and the National  Association  of Securities  Dealers,  Inc. do not
permit a member  firm of any such  entity  to  consent  to  adoption  of  either
proposal without specific  instructions to such effect from the beneficial owner
of the shares of the Common  Stock whom the member  firm  represents  of record.
Accordingly,  the Company urges you, if you are a beneficial  owner, to instruct
the member firm which holds of record your shares of the Common Stock to consent
to both  proposals  as to which the Board is seeking your  consent.  The Company
also urges you, if you are a  beneficial  owner whose shares of the Common Stock
are held of record on the Record Date by an entity other than a member firm,  to
urge such other entity to consent with respect to both proposals.

         If you desire to consent,  please  return the enclosed  consent to U.S.
Stock Transfer  Corporation,  as the Transfer Agent for the Common Stock, in the
enclosed  self-addressed  prepaid envelope. If you do not have such an envelope,
you can mail your consent to U.S.  Stock  Transfer  Corporation at 1745 Gardenia
Avenue, Suite 200, Glendale, CA 91204, Attention: Proxy Department.

         If you do not consent,  you shall have the right to receive payment for
your  shares  as a result  of  shareholders'  approval  of either or both of the
proposals.  Your  attention  is  directed to the  caption  "Dissenters'  Rights"
elsewhere in this Consent Solicitation Statement.

         Each of the  persons  who has served as a director  or as an  executive
officer of the Company since April 1, 2003 (i.e., the beginning of the last full
fiscal year of the Company) has no substantial interest,  direct or indirect, by
security  holdings or otherwise,  in either of the proposals as to which consent
is being solicited.

                            PROPOSED SALE TRANSACTION

Terms of Sale

         On  October  3,  2003,  the  Company  entered  into an  Asset  Purchase
Agreement, or the "APA," with Spray Products Corporation,  or Spray, pursuant to
which  the  Company  agreed  to sell to  Spray  (or  its  designated  affiliate)
substantially  all of the  operating  assets of the Company for a price equal to
the sum of the  value of the  inventory,  the  amount  of  collectible  accounts
receivable and $100,000,  less the amount of trade payables of the Company which
are being  assumed  by  Spray.  You may find  information  relating  to  Spray's
business  in  the  section  "Spray  Data"  under  this  caption  "Proposed  Sale
Transaction."  A copy  of the  APA is  attached  to  this  Consent  Solicitation
Statement as Appendix A and an amendment  dated  February 26, 2004 to the APA is
attached  as  Appendix B. We  recommend  that you read both.  The Company is not
transferring  any of its cash or cash  equivalents as part of the transaction so
that they will be an available  asset in any  acquisition  or merger  discussion
with a third party.  The  operating  assets to be  transferred  to Spray are the
Company's  inventories  of finished  goods,  raw materials and work in progress;
books and records, including customer and supplier lists and other data relating
to the operating  business;  the trade name  "PerfectData  Corporation"  and all
other  names  used in the  business;  the  goodwill  relating  to the  business;
accounts  receivable  as to  which  the  parties  agree;  all of  the  Company's
machinery  and  equipment,  office  furniture,  computer  equipment and supplies
(except what the Company is using in its new office);  and all of the  Company's
intellectual property rights.

         Because the Company's  largest  customer had threatened to seek another
supplier because of a supplier's offer of lower prices,  and because of the long
delay in closing the transaction,  thereby causing uncertainty for customers and
Spray, the Company and Spray have agreed in principle to the following revisions
to the APA: (1) effective June 1, 2004,  Spray assumed full  responsibility  for
all of the Company's  customers in order to prevent  possible losses of customer
business; (2) the aforementioned payment of $100,000 was reduced to $80,000; (3)
based on the amounts of the items  constituting  the  purchase  price  described
above  and as  modified  in (2) as if the  closing  was held May 31,  2004,  the
Company  was to  advise  Spray of this  estimated  purchase  price and Spray was
promptly to advance to the Company an amount in excess of what the Company  owed
Spray for product  purchased from Spray;  and (4) the Company may put the assets
to Spray for the purchase  price on the earlier of (a) September 30, 2004 or (b)
the Company receiving shareholder consent to the sale to Spray.

         Had the  Company  closed  with  Spray on March 31,  2004,  based on the
revision  described in the preceding  paragraph,  the Company  estimates that it
would have received $67,900 as the purchase price based on (1) $270,000 which is
the sum of (a) $162,000 (collectible accounts receivable less customer credits),
$28,000 (inventory) and (c) $80,000 less $202,100 (trade payables).  Because the
closing,  assuming  shareholder  consent will not occur until the 11th day after
this  Consent  Solicitation  Statement  is  mailed at the  earliest,  all of the
foregoing  amounts in  calculating  the  precise  price  except the  $80,000 may
fluctuate depending on the customer orders, shipments and payments between March
31, 2003 and the closing date.  Accordingly,  the Company may receive a purchase
price from Spray that is more or less than the estimated $67,900 as of March 31,
2004.

         When the PerfectData  Board  authorized in September 2003 the execution
of the  APA,  the  Board  deemed  the  purchase  price  from  Spray  to be  fair
consideration for the assets because the Company had negotiated over a period of
months with  several  potential  purchasers  (which were  considered  the likely
candidates to purchase the business). Each of the potential purchaser candidates
indicated  that the only assets for which it would pay a  specified  amount were
the Company's  inventories of finished goods, raw materials and work in progress
and outstanding accounts  receivable,  each to be valued as of the closing date,
and that the prospective  purchaser would assume the Company's obligation to pay
accounts payable relating to operating the business which were outstanding as of
the closing  date.  None of the  prospective  purchasers  was willing to pay any
additional  specified amount for the other assets to be transferred as described
in the second preceding paragraph of this section. Accordingly, the negotiations
centered  on the amount  each  candidate  would be willing to pay the Company in
excess of the sum of the value of the inventory and accounts receivable less the
assumed accounts  payable.  The amounts offered to the Company ranged from a low
of $50,000 to a high of $125,000 and the offers came from two major customers of
the Company,  a competitor  which was  attempting  to lure away one of the major
customers  of the  Company  and  Spray,  its major  supplier.  The  Board,  when
authorizing  the APA, noted that Spray's then offer of $100,000 was  dollar-wise
consistent with the other offers.  In addition,  Spray was the major supplier to
the Company of compressed gas dusters,  which product  represented more than 85%
of the Company's sales.  Accordingly,  the Board believed that the sale to Spray
would be least  disruptive to its  customers  and the easiest to  implement.  In
addition, Spray assisted in persuading one major customer not to turn to another
supplier,  thereby continuing revenues for the Company, and also offered to hire
the Company's Director of Business Development (and subsequently did on November
1, 2003 when it assumed  management of the fulfillment of customer orders).  The
Board also considered the threat of two major customers to switch  suppliers and
the other reasons described below in the section "Reasons for Transaction" under
this caption "Proposed Sale Transaction."

         Even with the reduction in the  determination  of the purchase price by
$20,000,  the Board  still  believes  the  purchase  price from Spray to be fair
consideration for the assets,  especially in view of the threat by the Company's
largest  customer  described  in the third  preceding  paragraph in this section
"Terms of Sale" under this caption  "Proposed Sale  Transaction"  to cease doing
business  with the  Company.  The  closing  of the sale of the  assets to Spray,
assuming the Company  receives  consents from the holders of at least a majority
of the outstanding  shares on the Record Date,  shall occur on the day following
the receipt of the last such  consent,  but not earlier than ten  calendar  days
after the mailing of this  Consent  Solicitation  Statement to  shareholders  as
required by California  law. The APA provides for not earlier than the 21st day,
but the parties have orally agreed to the earlier date.

         In the event  either  party  terminates  the APA  because  of the other
party's violation  thereof,  or if the other party is unable to close, the other
party shall pay a break-up fee of $100,000 to the terminating party.

         A condition  precedent under the APA to closing the transaction is that
the Company  obtain the  approval of its  shareholders,  which is the purpose of
this consent solicitation. Spray has agreed to take the purchased assets "as is"
and all  warranties,  express or implied,  are excluded from the sale of assets.
The  APA  contains  standard  representations  and  warranties  by  each  party,
covenants,  including  one to maintain  the "status quo" until  closing,  and an
agreement  by each  party to  indemnify  the other if the  indemnifying  party's
representations  and warranties are untrue or incorrect in any material  respect
and if  the  indemnifying  party  fails  to  observe  or  perform  covenants  or
agreements, provided that the claims exceed $25,000.

Management Arrangement

         Since November 1, 2003, Spray has,  pursuant to the APA, been acting as
the  manager for the  fulfillment  of orders from the  Company's  customers.  As
compensation for Spray's  services,  Spray has been receiving a fee of 7 1/2% of
the Net Sales (as such term is defined), payable monthly. In the APA "Net Sales"
is defined as the gross  invoice price of each product sold to a customer of the
Company less all commissions payable in connection with such sale and any rebate
given to the  customer in the ordinary  course of the  Company's  business.  The
Company has been  responsible for all shipping and freight  charges.  Spray has,
effective April 1, 2004, increased its charges to the Company for its products.

Reasons for Transaction

         The Company's Board of Directors, after consultation with certain major
shar eholders, had elected in June 2003 to sell the operating business assets of
the Company  because,  despite  efforts by the Company  during the prior  fiscal
years which had  increased  revenues and reduced its  expenses,  the Company was
continuing to operate at a loss,  thereby  diluting its cash position,  which is
its  major  asset.  You may find  information  as to the  Company's  results  of
operations  during the fiscal  year ended  March 31,  2003 in Appendix D to this
Consent  Solicitation  Statement.  You  may  make  requests  for  the  financial
statements relating to the earlier years shown in the table by mail or telephone
to Irene J. Marino,  the Company's  Vice  President,  Finance,  at the Company's
address or phone number listed in the section  "Miscellaneous" under the caption
"Contact Information."

         In making its decision to sell the Company's business  operations,  the
Board noted that the Company had received  offers to buy, and then operate,  the
Company's  operations,  that there were threats  from  certain of the  Company's
major  customers  that  they  were  considering   turning  to  other  suppliers,
especially in view of the  announcement as to the Company's then proposed merger
transaction  with SuperCom,  and that the Company's lease would (and did) expire
on June 30, 2003,  thereby  raising the question of whether a long-term  renewal
was feasible  under all the  circumstances.  The Board  concluded that a sale or
liquidation of the operating assets was in the best interests of the Company and
its shareholders even if no transaction with SuperCom or another  acquisition or
merger  entity was  effected.  SuperCom  had,  in any event,  made sale of these
operations a precondition to consummation of the Company's transaction with it.

         As  indicated  in  the  following   section  "Risk  if  Transaction  Is
Consummated"  under this caption  "Proposed Sale  Transaction," the Company does
not intend to dissolve or liquidate the Company following the sale. Accordingly,
there will be no dividend or distribution  paid to the  shareholders as a result
of the sale to Spray. Unless and until the Company consummates an acquisition or
merger  agreement  as  described  in such  section,  the  Company  will  have no
revenues.  It will,  however,  still be paying the costs of  remaining  a public
company and seeking such merger or acquisition candidate, so that its results of
operations will still show a loss.

Risk if Transaction Is Consummated

         If the Company receives the requisite consents and then consummates the
sale to Spray,  the  Company  will have no  operations  and,  accordingly,  will
receive no revenues  unless and until an  acquisition is made as provided in the
succeeding  paragraph.  However, as a result of the management  arrangement with
Spray  described  in the section  "Management  Arrangement"  under this  caption
"Proposed  Sale  Transaction,"  the Company has moved to smaller  facilities and
substantially  reduced its on-going  overhead  expenses.  Effective  October 15,
2003,  the Company has been  leasing  office  space in Simi  Valley,  California
initially for six-month term, and subsequently for an additional six-month term,
at $950 per month.  From June 1993 to June 20, 2003, the Company leased a 24,500
square-foot  building  constructed  in Simi Valley,  California for the specific
needs of the Company and continued to use such space, on a month-to-month basis,
until October 31, 2003. The monthly rental,  net of sublease  income,  under the
lease for such facility was $8,504.  In addition,  the Company  terminated  four
employees,  so that it currently  employs four persons and will,  subsequent  to
consummation of the sale to Spray, employ only three persons.  However,  despite
these reductions in expenses,  with the Company  continuing to incur expenses to
continue  as a public  company  and to seek a  suitable  merger  or  acquisition
candidate,  both as  described  in the  succeeding  paragraph,  the Company will
continue to operate at a loss without revenues to offset these expenses.

         The Board does not intend to dissolve or  liquidate  the  Company,  but
instead, with the Company having cash or cash equivalents currently in excess of
$1,500,000,  the Board  intends to continue its search for a suitable  merger or
acquisition candidate.  The Company believes that, after the sale of assets, the
Company's  working  capital is  adequate to fund its cash  requirements  for its
fiscal year ending March 31, 2005. The directors believe that the Company,  with
no losing business operations,  with its continuing as a public company and with
the cash  position  described in the preceding  sentence,  remains an attractive
merger or  acquisition  candidate,  especially  with the recent  improvement  in
general stock market conditions. During the past three fiscal years, the Company
had  been  seeking  acquisitions  which  have not been  related  to its  current
business.  The Board was of the opinion that profitability on a continuous basis
would not be achieved  absent an  acquisition  of a new  business or  businesses
and/or  new  products.  However,  the  Board  cannot  determine  when  any  such
acquisition will be consummated, if at all. During recent years, three potential
acquisitions (including SuperCom) were actively pursued; however, all terminated
for different reasons and the Company incurred expenses in connection therewith.
See the following section "Terminated Acquisitions" under this caption "Proposed
Sale Transaction."

Terminated Acquisitions

         From  October  2001 to  February  2002,  the  Company  was  engaged  in
negotiations pursuant to which the shareholders of GraphCo  Technologies,  Inc.,
or GraphCo,  would acquire a majority  interest in, and control of the Board of,
the Company. GraphCo is a technologies, software and systems development company
providing  advanced  security  solutions  for biometric  identification,  secure
access,  surveillance  and  secure  law  enforcement  incident  management.  The
negotiations were mutually terminated on February 19, 2002.

         In August and September  2002, the Company was engaged in  negotiations
with another  privately-held  company,  with annual revenues  approximating $100
million,  pursuant to which the  stockholders  of that company  would  acquire a
majority  interest  in, and  control of the Board of, the  Company.  Just as the
parties  were  prepared  to execute a  definitive  merger  agreement,  the other
company   received  an  offer  from  another  very  large  public   company  and
negotiations were terminated during the weekend of September 20, 2002. The other
company was ultimately sold to another very large public company.

         On July 2, 2003,  the Company  entered  into an  Agreement  and Plan of
Merger and  Reorganization,  or the "Merger  Agreement," and related  agreements
with SuperCom,  an Israeli  corporation,  culminating the negotiations which had
begun in April  2003.  SuperCom  is engaged  in the  research,  development  and
marketing  of advanced  technologies  and  products  for  government  secured ID
projects  and smart card  production  technology.  Its common stock is currently
traded on the  Euronext  Brussels New Market.  On October 24, 2003,  the Company
filed  a  Registration   Statement  on  Form  S-4,  File  No.   333-109933  (the
"Registration  Statement"),  in order to make available a joint proxy  statement
for use by the Company and SuperCom to solicit approvals of the transaction from
their  respective  shareholders and a prospectus for the Company to offer shares
of the Common Stock to the  SuperCom  shareholders  if the proposed  transaction
were approved and  consummated.  If the  transaction had been  consummated,  the
SuperCom  shareholders would have received  approximately 78% of the outstanding
shares,  subject to  adjustment  upward  depending  on the  Company's  Final Net
Available  Cash (as  defined) at the  closing,  and three of the five  directors
would have been  designees of SuperCom.  When it became  obvious to both parties
that,  in order for the  Registration  Statement to become  effective,  SuperCom
would, at a minimum, be required to include audited financial statements for its
fiscal year which ended December 31, 2003,  thereby further  delaying closing of
the transaction as to which  negotiations  had begun in April 2003 and which the
parties  initially  hoped to close by October  2003,  the Merger  Agreement  was
terminated  after  discussions as to  alternatives.  From the perspective of the
Company's  directors,  continuation of the  transaction  would have required the
Company to incur additional expenses, thereby further reducing its Net Available
Cash and  resulting  in further  dilution to its  shareholders  absent  SuperCom
agreeing to change the dilution formula,  and with no certainty as to when there
would be a closing.  The Company's  directors also were concerned  about certain
developments in SuperCom. SuperCom's subsequently reported results of operations
confirmed to the directors that these concerns were valid and, accordingly,  the
desirability to the Company of the agreement having been terminated.

Spray Data

         Spray is a  manufacturer  of  chemical  specialties,  as, for  example,
paints, varnishes,  lacquers,  enamels or allied products, and aerosol products.
Spray or its  predecessor  has provided  products  and  services to  automotive,
industrial  and  retail   customers  since  1922.   Spray  has  two  East  Coast
manufacturing  plants and a distribution  center located in Fresno,  California,
and has 25 employees (up to 37 in its peak season).  Spray's revenue in the last
fiscal year was over $15,000,000.

Regulatory Approvals

         Except for  compliance  with the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  as
amended,  or the  "Exchange  Act,"  with  respect to this  Consent  Solicitation
Statement,  no federal or state  regulatory  approvals or other  compliances are
required or must be obtained in connection with the proposed sale.

Relationships

         The proposed  transaction with Spray was negotiated at arm's-length and
the Board is not aware of any relationships,  familial or otherwise, between the
Company,  its  directors,  its executive  officers or any of its  affiliates and
Spray.

Recommendation

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS CONSENT IN FAVOR OF
THE PROPOSAL TO SELL THE  OPERATING  ASSETS OF THE COMPANY TO SPRAY ON THE TERMS
AND CONDITIONS DESCRIBED IN THIS CONSENT SOLICITATION STATEMENT BY EXECUTING THE
ENCLOSED  FORM OF CONSENT,  CHECKING THE "FOR" BOX AND RETURNING THE SAME TO THE
COMPANY'S  TRANSFER  AGENT.  UNLESS A  CONTRARY  CHOICE IS  SPECIFIED,  A SIGNED
CONSENT  FORWARDED TO THE COMPANY WITH NO BOX CHECKED WILL BE VOTED FOR THE SALE
PROPOSAL.  A FAILURE TO RETURN THE  CONSENT  WILL HAVE THE SAME EFFECT AS A VOTE
AGAINST THE SALE.




        SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

         The  following  table  sets  forth,  as of  the  Record  Date,  certain
information with respect to (1) any person known to the Company who beneficially
owned more than 5% of the Common Stock, (2) each director of the Company (3) the
Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company  and (4) all  directors  and  executive
officers as a group.  Each beneficial  owner who is a natural person has advised
the Company that he or she has sole voting and investment power as to the shares
of the Common  Stock,  except that,  until an option or a warrant is  exercised,
there is no voting right and except as noted in Note (2) to the table.

                                   Number of Shares        Percentage of
Name and Address                   of Common Stock         Common Stock
of Beneficial Owner                Beneficially Owned      Beneficially Owned(1)
Joseph Mazin                           788,997 (2)           12.71
c/o Flamemaster Corporation
11120 Sherman Way
Sun Valley, CA  91252

StarBiz Corporation                    537,997 (2)            8.66
11120 Sherman Way
Sun Valley, CA 91252

William B. Wachtel,                    427,873                6.89
Trustee of Digital Trust (3)
c/o Wachtel & Masyr, LLP
110 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022

Harris A. Shapiro (4)                  309,499 (5)            4.96
c/o PerfectData Corporation
1445 East Los Angeles Avenue
Simi Valley, CA  93065

Bryan Maizlish (6)                     19,255 (7)             less than 1%
9705 Conestoga Way
Potomac, MD 20854

Timothy D. Morgan (6)                  20,455 (7)             less than 1%
11734 Gladstone Circle
Fountain Valley, CA 92708

Tracie Savage (6)                      29,555 (8)             less than 1%
6212 Banner Avenue
Los Angeles, CA  90038

Corey P. Schlossmann (6)               219,758 (7)            3.53
19654-A Roscoe Blvd.
Northridge, CA 91324

All directors and officers as a group  603,088 (9)            9.56
(6 in number)

(1)      The percentages  computed in the table are based upon 6,209,530  shares
         of the Common Stock which were  outstanding on the Record Date.  Effect
         is given,  pursuant to Rule 13-d(1)(i) under the Exchange Act to shares
         issuable upon the exercise of options or warrants currently exercisable
         or exercisable within 60 days of the Record Date.

(2)      The  shares of the  Common  Stock  reported  in the table  include  (a)
         537,997 shares owned by StarBiz  Corporation,  or "Star Biz," for which
         Mr.  Mazin  has  voting  power as the  President,  Chairman  and  Chief
         Executive  Officer  of  Star  Biz;  (b)  36,000  shares  owned  by  the
         Flamemaster  Corporation  Employees'  Profit Sharing Plan for which Mr.
         Mazin  is  the  fiduciary;  and  (c)  23,000  shares  owned  by  Altius
         Investment  Corporation,  or  "Altius,"  for which Mr. Mazin has shared
         voting power as Chairman of the Board of Altius.  Certain of the shares
         reported  in the  table are owned by Donna  Mazin,  his wife,  or as to
         which shares she shares dispositive and voting powers with Mr. Mazin.

(3)      William B. Wachtel as the Trustee of the Digital  Trust has,  under the
         trust  agreement,  sole voting and investment power with respect to the
         shares reported in the table. Harris A. Shapiro, currently the Chairman
         of the  Board,  the  Chief  Executive  Officer  and a  director  of the
         Company,  was the settler of the Digital Trust and made an  irrevocable
         grant to it of the assets  which the  Digital  Trust used to effect the
         purchase of the shares.  The beneficiaries of the Digital Trust are Mr.
         Shapiro's  children and  grandchildren  who survive  him,  although the
         Trustee, in his absolute discretion,  may pay or apply yearly income or
         the  principal  of the  Trust to any  beneficiary.  Because  he made an
         irrevocable grant and has no voting or investment power with respect to
         the  shares,  Mr.  Shapiro  is not the  beneficial  owner of the shares
         reported in the table as being owned of record by the Digital Trust and
         beneficially by the Trustee.

(4)      Mr. Shapiro is the Chairman of the Board,  the Chief Executive  Officer
         and a director of the Company.

(5)      The  shares of the  Common  Stock  reported  in the table  reflect  (a)
         284,500   shares   owned  by   Millennium   Capital   Corporation,   or
         "Millennium,"   for  which  Mr.  Shapiro  has  voting  power  as  its
         President;  (b) 6,666  shares  issuable  upon the exercise of an option
         expiring June 19, 2012 under the Company's  2000 Stock Option Plan (the
         "2000 Option Plan");  (c) 8,333 shares issuable upon the exercise of an
         option expiring  September 25, 2012 under the 2000 Option Plan; and (d)
         10,000  shares  issuable  upon the exercise by  Millennium of a warrant
         expiring March 30, 2005. The shares of the Common Stock reported in the
         table do not include (x) 3,334 shares issuable upon the exercise of the
         option  described in (b); (y) 16, 667 shares issuable upon the exercise
         of the option described in (c); and (z) 25,000 shares issuable upon the
         exercise of an option expiring June 9, 2014 under the 2000 Option Plan,
         none of which options was  exerciseable as to such shares on the Record
         Date or within 60 days thereafter.

(6)      A director of the Company.

(7)      The shares of the Common Stock  reported in the table include (a) 6,666
         shares  issuable upon the exercise of an option  expiring June 19, 2012
         under the 2000  Option  Plan and (b)  8,333  shares  issuable  upon the
         exercise  of an option  expiring  September  25,  2012 under the Option
         Plan.  The  shares of the  Common  Stock  reported  in the table do not
         include  (x) 3,334  shares  issuable  upon the  exercise  of the option
         described in (a); (y) 16,667  shares  issuable upon the exercise of the
         option  described  in (b);  and (z)  25,000  shares  issuable  upon the
         exercise of an option expiring June 9, 2014 under the 2000 Option Plan,
         none of which options was  exercisable  as to such shares on the Record
         Date or within 60 days thereafter.

(8)      The shares of the Common Stock reported in the table include (a) 10,000
         shares  issuable upon the exercise of an option  expiring July 20, 2005
         under the Company's 1985 Stock Option Plan;  (b) 6,666 shares  issuable
         upon the  exercise of an option  expiring  June 19, 2012 under the 2000
         Option  Plan;  and (c) 8,333  shares  issuable  upon the exercise of an
         option  expiring  September  25, 2012 under the 2000 Option  Plan.  The
         shares of the Common  Stock  reported  in the table do not  include (x)
         3,334 shares issuable upon the exercise of the option described in (b);
         (y) 16,667 shares issuable upon the exercise of the option described in
         (c);  and (z) 25,000  shares  issuable  upon the  exercise of an option
         expiring June 9, 2014 under the 2000 Option Plan, none of which options
         was  exercisable as to such shares on the Record Date or within 60 days
         thereafter.

(9)      The shares of the Common Stock  reported in the table include (a) those
         shares  indicated  in the text to Notes 5, 7 and 8 and (b) 1,250 shares
         issuable  to an  executive  officer  upon  the  exercise  of an  option
         expiring October 30, 2011 under the 2000 Option Plan. The shares of the
         Common  Stock  reported in the table do not  include  (x) 1,250  shares
         issuable  upon the  exercise  of the  option  described  in (b) and (y)
         10,000 shares issuable to the same executive  officer upon the exercise
         of an option expiring June 9, 2014 under the 2000 Option Plan,  neither
         of which options was  exercisable  as to such shares on the Record Date
         or within 60 days thereafter.

                  AUTHORIZE THE REINCORPORATION OF THE COMPANY
                           AS A DELAWARE CORPORATION.

General

         The second  proposal as to which the Board of  Directors is seeking the
consent of the Company's shareholders is for them to approve the reincorporation
of the Company, which is currently a California  corporation,  under the laws of
the State of Delaware. This reincorporation,  if authorized by consents, will be
effected by merging the Company with and into  PerfectData  (Delaware)  Inc., or
PerfectData  Delaware,  a newly-formed  Delaware  corporation and a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Company.  A copy of the  reincorporation  merger  agreement is
attached to this Consent Solicitation  Statement as Appendix E. You are urged to
read the  reincorporation  merger agreement carefully and in its entirety before
making a decision on the reincorporation proposal.

         PerfectData  Delaware will have the same  capitalization as the Company
except that its common  stock will have a par value of $0.01 per share while the
Company's Common Stock has no par value. The Board of Directors does not believe
that this change in par value will have any significant  effect on the Company's
shareholders.  A similar  change  would be made to the par value of the  "blank
check" preferred stock, as to which no shares are outstanding in the Company.

Reasons for Change

         Almost every  potential  acquisition  or merger  candidate to which the
Company  has  spoken  has   expressed  its   preference   that  the  Company  be
reincorporated  as a Delaware  corporation  for the  reasons  herein  discussed.
SuperCom made this  reincorporation a condition precedent to consummation of the
proposed transaction with it.

         If a merger or acquisition  proposal with a third party is consummated,
the principal  executive offices of the Company in Simi Valley,  California will
be closed,  with the principal executive offices of the third party becoming the
principal  executive  offices  of the  Company.  Accordingly,  following  such a
transaction, the Company's headquarters may no longer be located in the State of
California  and a reason for the Company  continuing to be subject to California
law will be eliminated.

         Even if no  transaction  with a  merger  or  acquisition  candidate  is
consummated,  the sale by the Company to Spray of its current business operation
which had entirely been conducted from its  headquarters in California  makes it
less necessary to continue to have the headquarters located in that State.

         After a careful  review of the  differences  between  California law to
which the Company is currently  subject and  Delaware  law to which  PerfectData
Delaware is currently subject,  the Company's Board of Directors  concluded that
the  Company  should be  reincorporated  in the State of  Delaware.  Some of the
principal  differences which could materially affect the rights of a shareholder
are reviewed under the caption "Comparison of Rights of Holders of the Company's
and PerfectData Delaware's Common Stock" immediately  following this caption in
this Consent Solicitation  Statement.  The Company's Board of Directors believes
that the General  Corporation  Law of the State of Delaware,  or the DGCL,  will
furnish the most flexibility to the Company's directors,  while at the same time
protecting the rights of the Company's shareholders.

         For many  years  the  State  of  Delaware  has  followed  a  policy  of
encouraging  incorporation in that State and has adopted  comprehensive,  modern
and flexible  corporate laws that are  periodically  updated and revised to meet
changing  business needs.  As a result,  many  corporations  have been initially
incorporated in Delaware or have  subsequently  reincorporated in Delaware in a
manner similar to that proposed by the Company. Because of Delaware's prominence
as a state of  incorporation  for many  corporations,  the Delaware  courts have
developed  considerable  expertise  in  dealing  with  corporate  issues  and  a
substantial body of case law has developed construing the DGCL, and establishing
public  policies with respect to  corporations  incorporated  in Delaware.  As a
result, Delaware corporation law is comparatively well known and understood.  It
is anticipated that, as in the past,  Delaware  corporation law will continue to
be interpreted and explained in a number of significant  court  decisions.  You,
our shareholders should be aware,  however,  that Delaware law has been publicly
criticized on the grounds that it does not afford minority  stockholders all the
same  substantive  rights and protections that are available under the laws of a
number of other  states  (including  California)  and  that,  as a result of the
proposed reincorporation, your rights as shareholders will change in a number of
important  respects,  as discussed in the next  paragraph  and under the caption
"Comparison  of Rights of Holders of the  Company's and  PerfectData  Delaware's
Common Stock"  immediately  following this caption in this Consent  Solicitation
Statement.  The Company's Board of Directors believes that the advantages of the
reincorporation to the Company and you, our shareholders,  outweigh its possible
disadvantages.

         The Board of Directors believes that the reincorporation  will have the
following effects, among others, on your rights as a shareholder as you become a
stockholder of PerfectData Delaware:

         -        Your cumulative  voting rights as shareholders with respect to
                  the election of directors will be eliminated, thereby limiting
                  the ability of minority shareholders to have representation on
                  the Board of Directors.

         -        Section  203 of the  DGCL  may  make  it  more  difficult  for
                  interested stockholders to acquire PerfectData Delaware in the
                  future,   while  there  is  no  comparable   provision   under
                  California law.

         -        California  law furnishes  certain  protections  for you, as a
                  shareholder, on mergers or other forms of reorganization which
                  Delaware laws does not. As an example, California law requires
                  approval  with  respect  to  a   reorganization   involving  a
                  corporation issuing equity securities (common stock, preferred
                  stock or other  securities  convertible  into, or  exercisable
                  for, shares of common stock) in exchange for the capital stock
                  or assets of the acquired company, while Delaware law does not
                  require stockholder approval for such a transaction.

         -        You, as a stockholder of PerfectData  Delaware,  will not have
                  dissenters' or appraisal  rights with respect to a sale of the
                  Company's  assets not in the  ordinary  course of its business
                  (as, for  example,  the proposed  Spray  transaction)  or with
                  respect to a  reorganization,  other than a statutory  merger,
                  as, for example, the issuance or exchange of equity securities
                  (common stock, preferred stock or other securities convertible
                  into, or exercisable  for, shares of the common stock) for the
                  capital stock or assets of the acquired company.

         -        You, individually or with a group of other shareholders,  with
                  specified  percentage  ownership  of  shares, will   lose  the
                  absolute  right to  inspect  the  shareholders'  list  without
                  showing a purpose  reasonably  related to your  interest  as a
                  shareholder.  - Although  the tests for paying  dividends  and
                  repurchasing  shares differ between  California law on the one
                  hand and Delaware  law on the other hand,  this issue will not
                  be meaningful to you, as a PerfectData  Delaware  stockholder,
                  because of the  unlikelihood  of cash dividends or repurchases
                  of shares in the foreseeable future.

         -        You, as a  shareholder,  may currently  institute a derivative
                  action  against the Company even if you are not a  shareholder
                  at the time of the transaction in question.

         -        You may  institute a  derivative  action  against  PerfectData
                  Delaware only if, at the time of the  transaction in question,
                  you were a  shareholder  of the  Company or a  stockholder  of
                  PerfectData Delaware, whichever is applicable.

         -        You and other shareholders will lose the right to dissolve the
                  Company if 50% of the  holders of voting  stock so demand even
                  if the Board of Directors does not act.

The  principal  differences  between the rights of California  shareholders  and
Delaware  stockholders  are discussed in "Comparison of Rights of Holders of the
Company's and PerfectData  Delaware's  Common Stock." You are urged to read this
section of this Consent  Solicitation  Statement  carefully  and in its entirety
before making a decision on the reincorporation proposal.

Summary of Provisions of PerfectData Delaware's Charter Documents

         In addition to the changes in  shareholders'  rights  resulting  in the
change from California law to Delaware law, PerfectData  Delaware's  Certificate
of  Incorporation  and  Bylaws  contain  some  important  differences  from  the
Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  and Bylaws.  For a  description  of these
differences,  please see  "Description of the Company and PerfectData  Delaware
Capital  Stock"  and  "Comparison  of Rights of Holders of the  Company's  and
PerfectData   Delaware's  Common  Stock."  A  copy  of  PerfectData  Delaware's
Certificate of Incorporation is attached to this Consent Solicitation  Statement
as Appendix F, and a copy of PerfectData  Delaware's  Bylaws is attached to this
Consent  Solicitation  Statement  as  Appendix  G. You are  urged  to read  this
Certificate of  Incorporation  and Bylaws carefully and in their entirety before
making a decision on the reincorporation proposal.

Exchange of Stock Certificates

         If the  reincorporation is approved and implemented,  you will not have
to  exchange  your  certificates  evidencing  shares  of the  Common  Stock  for
certificates  evidencing shares of the PerfectData  Delaware common stock unless
and until you desire to sell or otherwise transfer the shares.

Recommendation

THE COMPANY'S BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS  CONSENT IN FAVOR
OF THE  PROPOSAL  TO  REINCORPORATE  THE  COMPANY  IN THE STATE OF  DELAWARE  BY
EXECUTING THE ENCLOSED FORM OF CONSENT, CHECKING THE "FOR" BOX AND RETURNING THE
SAME TO THE COMPANY'S TRANSFER AGENT.  UNLESS A CONTRARY CHOICE IS SPECIFIED,  A
SIGNED  CONSENT  FORWARDED  TO THE COMPANY WITH NO BOX CHECKED WILL BE VOTED FOR
APPROVAL OF THE REINCORPORATION  PROPOSAL.  A FAILURE TO RETURN THE CONSENT WILL
HAVE THE SAME EFFECT AS A VOTE AGAINST THE REINCORPORATION.

                COMPARISON OF RIGHTS OF HOLDERS OF THE COMPANY'S
                     AND PERFECTDATA DELAWARE'S COMMON STOCK

         Upon the consummation of the reincorporation  merger, holders of shares
of the Common  Stock will  become  holders of the  PerfectData  Delaware  common
stock.  As a  result,  the  Company's  shareholders,  whose  current  rights  as
shareholders  are governed by California law, will become  PerfectData  Delaware
stockholders, and their rights as stockholders will be governed by Delaware law.
Similarly,  the holders of options or  warrants to acquire  shares of the Common
Stock will become holders of equivalent options or warrants to acquire shares of
the PerfectData Delaware common stock.

         The  statutes  and  court  decisions  with  respect  to the  rights  of
shareholders under California law and of stockholders under Delaware law contain
certain  differences.  In addition,  the Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws of
the Company differ in certain respects from the Certificate of Incorporation and
Bylaws of PerfectData  Delaware,  the Delaware corporation that will survive the
reincorporation.

         The  following  is an  explanation  of what the  Company,  based on the
advice  of  its  counsel,  Wachtel  &  Masyr,  LLP,  deems  to be  the  material
differences  among the rights of a shareholder under California law and those of
a  stockholder  under  Delaware law and as a  shareholder  under the Articles of
Incorporation  and the  Bylaws of the  Company  and as a  stockholder  under the
Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws of PerfectData  Delaware.  The following
discussion  does  not  purport  to  constitute  a  detailed  comparison  of  the
provisions  of the  California  General  Corporation  Law, or the CGCL,  and the
Delaware  General  Corporate Law, or the DGCL. The  shareholders  of the Company
should refer to these statutes for a definitive  explanation of each statute. In
addition,  the  discussion  of  the  differences  in  rights  governed  by  each
respective  corporation's charter documents does not purport to be complete, and
the shareholders of the Company should refer to the respective charter documents
of each  corporation.  Copies of the  Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  and
Bylaws are available for  inspection at the principal  executive  offices of the
Company,  and copies will be sent to shareholders of the Company upon request. A
request  may be  made  to the  Company  as  described  in the  section  "Contact
Information"  under  the  caption  "Miscellaneous"  elsewhere  in  this  Consent
Solicitation Statement. A copy of the Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws of
PerfectData  Delaware are attached as Appendices F and G, respectively,  to this
Consent Solicitation Statement. Authorized Capital Stock

         The Company.  The  authorized  capital  stock of the Company  currently
consists of  10,000,000  shares of Common  Stock,  no par value,  and  2,000,000
shares of Preferred Stock, no par value.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  The  authorized  capital  stock of  PerfectData
Delaware  currently  consists of  10,000,000  shares of common  stock,  $.01 par
value, and 2,000,000 shares of preferred stock, $.01 par value.

Size of the Board of Directors

         The  Company.  Under  the  CGCL,  although  changes  to the  number  of
directors  must in general be approved by a majority of the  outstanding  voting
shares,  the board of directors  may fix the exact number of directors  within a
stated  range set forth in the  articles  of  incorporation  or bylaws,  if that
stated range has been approved by the shareholders. The Company's Bylaws provide
that the  number of  directors  shall  not be less than  three or more than five
until  changed by an amendment of the  Articles of  Incorporation  or by a bylaw
adopted by the Company's shareholders.

         PerfectData Delaware.  The DGCL permits the board of directors alone to
change  the  authorized  number  of  directors  or the  range of the  number  of
directors by amendment to the corporation's bylaws, unless the directors are not
authorized  to amend the  bylaws  or the  number  of  directors  is fixed in the
certificate of incorporation  (in which case a change to the number of directors
may be made only by an amendment to the certificate of incorporation approved by
the stockholders).  The PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate of Incorporation does
not prohibit the  directors  from amending the bylaws nor does it fix the number
of directors.  Accordingly,  the provision in the  PerfectData  Delaware  Bylaws
provides  that the range of the number of  directors  shall be between  five and
eight and the number  within  that range shall be fixed from time to time by the
board of directors.

Removal of Directors

         The  Company.  Under the CGCL,  any  director  or the  entire  board of
directors may be removed, with or without cause, with the approval of a majority
of the outstanding shares entitled to vote;  however, no individual director may
be removed  (unless  the entire  board is  removed)  if the number of votes cast
against such removal would be sufficient to elect the director under  cumulative
voting.  The  Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  and Bylaws do not contain a
provision governing the removal of directors, so the aforementioned provision of
the CGCL governs the removal of directors.

         PerfectData Delaware.  Under the DGCL, a director of a corporation that
does not have a  classified  board of  directors  or  cumulative  voting  may be
removed with or without cause with the approval of a majority of the outstanding
shares entitled to vote. In the case of a Delaware corporation having cumulative
voting,  if less than the entire  board is to be removed,  a director may not be
removed  without cause unless the shares voted against such removal would not be
sufficient to elect the director  under such  cumulative  voting  procedures.  A
director of a  corporation  with a classified  board of directors may be removed
only for cause, unless the certificate of incorporation provides otherwise.  The
PerfectData   Delaware   Certificate  of  Incorporation  does  not  provide  for
cumulative  voting or for a classified  board of  directors.  Consequently,  any
director of PerfectData  Delaware may be removed from office at any time with or
without cause upon the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the then
outstanding shares of voting stock.

Filling Vacancies on the Board of Directors

         The  Company.  Under the CGCL,  any vacancy on the board of  directors,
other than one created by removal of a  director,  may be filled by the board of
directors.  If the number of directors  is less than a quorum,  a vacancy may be
filled by the unanimous written consent of the remaining directors in office, or
the affirmative vote of a majority of the remaining directors at a meeting or by
a sole  remaining  director.  A vacancy  created by removal of a director may be
filled  by the  board of  directors  only if so  authorized  by a  corporation's
articles  of  incorporation  or  by  a  bylaw  approved  by  the   corporation's
shareholders.  The Company's  Bylaws,  which were approved by its  shareholders,
permit directors to fill vacancies created by the removal of a director.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  Under the  DGCL,  vacancies  and newly  created
directorships  may be filled by a majority of the directors then in office (even
though  less  than  a  quorum)  unless  otherwise  provided  in a  corporation's
certificate of incorporation or bylaws. The PerfectData  Delaware Certificate of
Incorporation  does not so  provide  and its  Bylaws  provide  that any  vacancy
resulting  from the  removal or  resignation  of a  director  may be filled by a
majority of the  directors  then in office (even though less than a quorum) even
if such  vacancy was created by removal of a director by the  stockholders.  The
stockholders may also fill such vacancy.

Cumulative Voting

         The Company.  Under the CGCL,  if any  shareholder  gives notice at the
meeting of his or her intention to cumulate votes for the election of directors,
any other shareholder of the corporation is also entitled to cumulate his or her
votes at such election  unless the corporation is a "listed  corporation"  (as
hereinafter  defined) and has a provision in its  articles of  incorporation  or
bylaws  that  eliminates  cumulative  voting.  A  "listed  corporation"  is  a
corporation whose shares are either (i) listed on the New York or American Stock
Exchanges or (ii)  designated for trading on the Nasdaq  National Market System.
The  Company's  Bylaws  permit  cumulative  voting and the Company is  currently
eligible  under the CGCL to eliminate  such voting  because it is not a "listed
corporation,"  but doing so would  require  shareholder  approval to change the
provision in the Company's Bylaws.

         PerfectData Delaware. Under the DGCL, cumulative voting in the election
of  directors  is  not  mandatory.   The  PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate  of
Incorporation and Bylaws do not provide for cumulative  voting. By approving the
reincorporation,  the Company's  shareholders will be eliminating the cumulative
voting rights which they  currently  have under the CGCL.  This  elimination  of
cumulative  voting  will limit the ability of  minority  shareholders  to obtain
representation on the PerfectData Delaware board of directors.

Classified Board of Directors

         The Company.  The CGCL prohibits a classified board of directors unless
the corporation is a "listed corporation" (as defined in the preceding section
"Cumulative   Voting").   Because  the  Company  is  currently  not  a  listed
corporation, it cannot currently have a classified board of directors.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  The  DGCL  permits,  but does  not  require,  a
classified  board of directors,  with  staggered  terms under which  one-half or
one-third  of the  directors  are  elected  for  terms  of two or  three  years,
respectively. This method of electing directors makes changes in the composition
of the board of  directors,  and thus a change in  control of a  corporation,  a
lengthier and more difficult process.  The PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate of
Incorporation and Bylaws do not provide for a classified board.

Voting Power

         The Company.  The CGCL permits a corporation to create series of shares
that are  entitled to cast more or less than one vote per share.  The  Company's
Articles of  Incorporation  states that each share of Company  capital stock has
the right to one vote at all meetings of shareholders.

         PerfectData  Delaware.   The  DGCL,  unless  otherwise  provided  in  a
corporation's  certificate of incorporation  or bylaws,  allows for one vote per
share of capital stock at all meetings of stockholders. The PerfectData Delaware
Certificate  of  Incorporation  states that each share of  PerfectData  Delaware
common stock has the right to one vote at all meetings of stockholders.

Power to Call Special Meeting of Shareholders

         The Company.  Under the CGCL, a special meeting of shareholders  may be
called by the board of directors,  the chairman of the board, the president, the
holders  of  shares  entitled  to cast  not less  than 10% of the  votes at such
meeting,  or  such  additional  persons  as are  authorized  by a  corporation's
articles of incorporation or bylaws. The Company's Bylaws provide that the board
of directors, the Chairman of the Board, the President, or the holders of shares
entitled  to cast not less than 10% of votes at such  meeting may call a special
meeting.

         PerfectData Delaware. Under the DGCL, a special meeting of stockholders
may be called by the board of directors or by any other person  authorized to do
so in the  corporation's  certificate of incorporation or bylaws.  The provision
governing special meeting of stockholders in the PerfectData  Delaware Bylaws is
similar to the current provision in the Company's Bylaws.

Action of Shareholders Without a Meeting

         The Company.  Under the CGCL, unless otherwise provided in the articles
of  incorporation,  any action  required to be taken or which may be taken at an
annual or special  meeting  may be taken  without a meeting  and  without  prior
notice if a written consent is signed by the holders of outstanding stock having
at least the minimum  number of votes  required  to  authorize  the  action.  If
consent  is  sought  from  less  than all  shareholders  entitled  to vote,  the
corporation must give notice to the non-consenting  shareholders.  The Company's
Articles of Incorporation  are silent on this subject,  so the provisions of the
CGCL as set forth herein  govern.  The Company  Bylaws are  consistent  with the
statutory provision.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  Under the DGCL, unless otherwise  provided in a
corporation's  certificate of incorporation,  any action required to be taken at
an  annual or  special  meeting  of a  corporation's  stockholders  may be taken
without a meeting if a resolution  in writing has been signed or consented to by
the holders of  outstanding  shares  having not less than the minimum  number of
votes that would be  necessary to authorize or take such action at a meeting and
notice  is  thereafter  given  to the  shareholders  who  did not  consent.  The
PerfectData  Delaware Certificate of Incorporation does not prohibit stockholder
actions without a meeting.

Amendment to Articles of Incorporation and Certificate of Incorporation

         The Company.  The CGCL  provides  that,  unless  otherwise  stated in a
corporation's  articles  of  incorporation,  an  amendment  to the  articles  of
incorporation  requires the approval of the corporation's board of directors and
the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote on
those shares.  Amendments to allow for stock splits,  unless the corporation has
more than one class of shares outstanding,  (including a proportionate  increase
in the authorized number of shares) do not require shareholder approval.  Unless
otherwise  provided  in the  articles of  incorporation,  any  provision  in the
articles of  incorporation  which  requires a greater vote than  required by law
cannot be amended or repealed except by the greater vote. The Company's Articles
of  Incorporation  are silent on this subject,  so the provisions of the CGCL as
set forth herein govern.

         PerfectData Delaware.  Under the DGCL, the certificate of incorporation
of a corporation  may be amended by resolution of the board of directors and the
affirmative  vote of the  holders of a  majority  of the  outstanding  shares of
voting stock then entitled to vote.  The DGCL also permits a corporation to make
provision in its certificate of incorporation  requiring a greater proportion of
the  voting  power to  approve a  specified  amendment.  PerfectData  Delaware's
Certificate of  Incorporation  does not contain a provision  requiring a greater
proportion of voting power to amend its Certificate of Incorporation.

Amendment to Bylaws

         The Company.  The CGCL provides that,  unless a corporation's  board of
directors is prohibited by the articles of incorporation, the bylaws, or Section
212 of the CGCL (relating to the number of directors),  a corporation's board of
directors or a majority of the  outstanding  shares entitled to vote may amend a
corporation's bylaws. The Company's Bylaws permit either the shareholders or the
Board to amend the Bylaws,  except  those  provisions  specifying  or changing a
fixed number of directors  or the maximum or minimum  number or changing  from a
fixed to a variable Board or vice versa. These provisions may only be amended by
the shareholders.

         PerfectData Delaware.  The DGCL provides that the power to adopt, amend
or repeal a corporation's  bylaws shall be held by the stockholders  entitled to
vote. A corporation may, in its certificate of incorporation, confer such powers
on the  board of  directors.  Under  the  PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate  of
Incorporation,   the  PerfectData  Delaware  Board  of  Directors  is  expressly
authorized to adopt, amend, alter or repeal the PerfectData Delaware Bylaws.

Statutory Anti-Takeover Protections

         The  Company.  The CGCL  contains  certain  limitations  on "cash  out
mergers"  and requires a fairness  opinion in situations in which an interested
party is involved in a business  combination as, for example,  a tender offer, a
merger  or  other  form of  reorganization  as  defined  in the  CGCL.  For more
information  as to  these  limitations,  see  the  following  section  "Required
Shareholder Votes in Connection with a Business Combination."

         PerfectData  Delaware.  The DGCL prohibits a Delaware  corporation from
engaging in a "business  combination"  with an "interested  stockholder" for
three  years   following  the  time  that  such  person  becomes  an  interested
stockholder.  With certain exceptions an interested stockholder is a person who,
or a group which, owns 15% or more of the corporation's outstanding voting stock
(including  any  rights  to  acquire  stock  pursuant  to  an  option,  warrant,
agreement,  arrangement or understanding,  or upon the exercise of conversion or
exchange  rights,  and stock with respect to which the person has voting  rights
only),  or is an affiliate or associate of the  corporation and was the owner of
15% or more of such voting stock at any time within the previous three years.

         For purposes of the DGCL, the term "business  combination" is defined
broadly to include mergers with or caused by the interested  stockholder,  sales
or other dispositions to the interested stockholder (except proportionately with
the  corporation's  other  stockholders)  of  assets  of  the  corporation  or a
subsidiary  equal  to  10%  or  more  of  the  aggregate  market  value  of  the
corporation's  consolidated  assets or its  outstanding  stock;  the issuance or
transfer by the  corporation or a subsidiary of stock of the corporation or such
subsidiary to the interested  stockholder  (except for transfers in a conversion
or exchange or a pro rata  distribution or certain other  transactions,  none of
which increase the interested stockholder's proportionate ownership of any class
or series of the  corporation's or such  subsidiary's  stock); or any receipt by
the interested stockholder (except  proportionately as a stockholder),  directly
or indirectly,  of any loans, advances,  guarantees,  pledges or other financial
benefits provided by or through the corporation or a subsidiary.

         The three-year  moratorium  imposed on business  combinations under the
DGCL does not apply if: (i) prior to the time at which such stockholder  becomes
an interested  stockholder  the board of directors  approves either the business
combination  or the  transaction  which  resulted  in  the  person  becoming  an
interested stockholder; (ii) the interested stockholder owns at least 85% of the
corporation's  voting stock upon consummation of the transaction which made him,
her or it an interested  stockholder  (excluding from the 85% calculation shares
owned by directors  who are also officers of the target  corporation  and shares
held  by  employee  stock  plans  which  do  not  permit   employees  to  decide
confidentially  whether to accept a tender or  exchange  offer);  or (iii) on or
after the time such person becomes an interested stockholder, the board approves
the business  combination and it is also approved at a stockholder meeting by 66
2/3% of the voting stock not owned by the interested stockholder.

         A Delaware  corporation may elect not to be governed by this section of
the  DGCL  by a  provision  in  its  certificate  of  incorporation  or  Bylaws.
PerfectData  Delaware  does not intend to make such  election;  therefore,  this
section of the DGCL will apply to PerfectData Delaware.

Required Shareholder Votes in Connection with a Business Combination

         The Company.  The CGCL  requires  that the holders of a majority of the
voting power of the  outstanding  shares of stock of both  acquiring  and target
corporations  entitled  to vote  approve  statutory  mergers  or other  forms of
reorganization,  which term includes the issuance of equity  securities  for the
stock or assets of the acquired  corporation.  The CGCL  contains a exception to
its  voting   requirements  for   reorganizations   where  shareholders  or  the
corporation  itself, or both,  immediately prior to the reorganization  will own
immediately after the  reorganization  equity securities  constituting more than
five-sixths of the voting power of the surviving or acquiring corporation or its
parent entity. The CGCL also requires that a sale of all or substantially all of
the assets of a corporation be approved by a majority of the outstanding  voting
shares of the corporation transferring such assets. With certain exceptions, the
CGCL also requires that  mergers,  reorganizations,  certain sales of assets and
similar  transactions  be  approved  by a majority  vote of each class of shares
outstanding.  The CGCL also requires that holders of nonredeemable  common stock
receive  nonredeemable  common  stock in a merger  of the  corporation  with the
holder of more than 50% but less than 90% of such common stock or its  affiliate
unless all of the holders of such common stock consent to the transaction.  This
provision of the CGCL may have the effect of making a  "cash-out"  merger by a
majority shareholder more difficult to accomplish.

         The CGCL also provides that,  except in certain  circumstances,  when a
tender offer or a proposal for a reorganization  or for a sale of assets is made
by an interested party (generally, a controlling or managing party of the target
corporation),  an  affirmative  opinion  in writing  as to the  fairness  of the
consideration to be paid to the shareholders  must be delivered to shareholders.
This fairness opinion requirement does not apply to a corporation which does not
have shares held of record by at least 100 persons,  or to a  transaction  which
has been qualified under California state  securities  laws.  Furthermore,  if a
tender of shares or vote is sought  pursuant to an interested  party's  proposal
and a later  proposal  is made by  another  party at least ten days prior to the
date of acceptance of the interested party proposal,  the  shareholders  must be
informed of the later offer and be afforded a reasonable opportunity to withdraw
any vote, consent or proxy, or to withdraw any tendered shares.

         The CGCL also requires that the holders of all shares of the same class
be treated equally in a merger  transaction  unless all holders of that class of
shares consent to the disparate treatment.

         The Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  do not contain any provision
regarding the shareholder vote in connection with a business combination, so the
provisions of the CGCL described above would govern.

         PerfectData Delaware.  The DGCL requires that the holders of a majority
of the voting power of the  outstanding  shares of stock of both  acquiring  and
target  corporations  entitled to vote approve statutory mergers.  The DGCL does
not require  stockholder  approval for the exchange of equity securities for the
stock or assets of the acquired  company.  The DGCL  contains a exception to its
voting  requirements for  reorganizations  where shareholders or the corporation
itself, or both,  immediately prior to the  reorganization  will own immediately
after the  reorganization  equity  securities  constituting more than 90% of the
voting power of the surviving or acquiring corporation or its parent entity.

         The DGCL requires that a sale of all or substantially all of the assets
of a corporation be approved by a majority of the  outstanding  voting shares of
the corporation transferring such assets.

         The  DGCL  does  not  require  a  stockholder  vote  of  the  surviving
corporation  in a merger  (unless  the  corporation  provides  otherwise  in its
certificate of  incorporation)  if (i) the agreement and plan of merger does not
amend the existing  certificate of incorporation of such surviving  corporation,
(ii) each share of the surviving corporation outstanding before the merger is an
identical  outstanding or treasury share after the merger,  and (iii) the number
of shares  to be issued by the  surviving  corporation  in the  merger  does not
exceed 20% of the shares outstanding immediately prior to the merger.

         The  PerfectData   Delaware  of  Incorporation  will  not  contain  any
provision   regarding  the  stockholder  vote  in  connection  with  a  business
combination, so the provisions of the DGCL described above shall govern.

         Although  the laws of  California  and  Delaware  may be  similar as to
whether the holders of voting stock of the surviving corporation have to vote on
a merger,  the CGCL gives certain  protections  to  shareholders  on mergers and
certain other  transactions.  To that extent,  a shareholder  of the Company may
lose certain rights as the result of the reincorporation, including the right to
vote on an acquisition where equity securities (common stock, preferred stock or
other securities  convertible  into, or exercisable for, shares of common stock)
of  PerfectData  Delaware  are  issued  for the  capital  stock or assets of the
acquired company.

Related-Party Transactions

         The Company. Under the CGCL, certain contracts or transactions in which
one or more of a corporation's directors has or have an interest are not void or
voidable solely because of such interest provided that certain conditions,  such
as obtaining the required approval and fulfilling the requirements of good faith
and full disclosure,  are met. Under the CGCL (i) either the shareholders or the
board of directors  must  approve any such  contract or  transaction  after full
disclosure  of the  material  facts  and,  in the  case of board  approval,  the
contract or transaction must also be "just and reasonable" to the corporation,
or (ii) the contract or transaction  must have been just and reasonable or fair,
as applicable,  to the  corporation  at the time it was approved.  In the latter
case, the CGCL explicitly places the burden of proof on the interested director.
Under the CGCL, if shareholder  approval is sought,  the interested  director is
not  entitled to vote his shares at a  shareholder  meeting  with respect to any
action regarding such contract or transaction.  If board approval is sought, the
contract or  transaction  must be approved by a majority vote of a quorum of the
directors,  without counting the vote of any interested  directors  (except that
interested directors may be counted for purposes of establishing a quorum).

         PerfectData Delaware. Under the DGCL, certain contracts or transactions
in which one or more of a  corporation's  directors has an interest are not void
or voidable  solely because of such interest  provided that certain  conditions,
such as obtaining the required  approval and fulfilling the requirements of good
faith and full disclosure,  are met. Under the DGCL, (i) either the shareholders
or the board of directors  must approve any such contract or  transaction  after
full  disclosure of the material facts and, in the case of board  approval,  the
contract or transaction  must also be "fair" to the  corporation,  or (ii) the
contract  or  transaction  must  have  been  just and  reasonable  or  fair,  as
applicable,  to the corporation at the time it was approved.  Under the DGCL, if
board  approval is sought,  the  contract or  transaction  must be approved by a
majority of the  disinterested  directors (even though less than a majority of a
quorum).

         Therefore,  certain  transactions that the Company's board of directors
might not be able to approve because of the number of interested  directors,  or
the exclusion of interested director shares,  could be approved by a majority of
the  disinterested  directors  of  PerfectData  Delaware,  although  less than a
majority  of a quorum,  or by a majority of all voting  shares,  which might not
include a majority of the disinterested shares. The Company's board of directors
is not aware of any plans to propose any transaction  involving directors of the
Company which could not be so approved  under the CGCL, but could be so approved
under the DGCL.

Indemnification and Limitation of Liability

         The Company.  The CGCL permits  indemnification of expenses incurred in
derivative  or  third-party  actions,  except  that with  respect to  derivative
actions (i) no indemnification  may be made without court approval when a person
is adjudged  liable to the  corporation in the performance of that person's duty
to the corporation  and its  shareholders,  unless a court  determines that such
person is entitled to indemnity for expenses,  and then such indemnification may
be  made  only  to the  extent  that  the  court  so  determines,  and  (ii)  no
indemnification may be made without court approval in respect of amounts paid or
expenses incurred in settling or otherwise  disposing of a threatened or pending
action or in respect of amounts  incurred in defending a pending action which is
settled or otherwise disposed of without court approval.

         Indemnification  is  permitted  by the CGCL only for acts taken in good
faith  and  believed  to be in the best  interests  of the  corporation  and its
shareholders,  as determined by a majority vote of a disinterested quorum of the
directors,  independent  legal counsel (if a quorum of independent  directors is
not  obtainable),  a majority  vote of a quorum of the  shareholders  (excluding
shares owned by the indemnified  party),  or the court handling the action.  The
CGCL requires  indemnification when the individual has successfully defended the
action on the merits.

         California  corporations may include in their articles of incorporation
a provision  which  extends  the scope of  indemnification  through  agreements,
bylaws or other corporate action beyond that which is specifically authorized by
statute. The Company's Articles of Incorporation include such a provision.  As a
result,  the Company has  followed  the  practice of  executing  indemnification
agreements with its directors and officers.

         The  CGCL  also  permits  a  corporation  to adopt a  provision  in its
articles  of  incorporation  eliminating  the  liability  of a  director  to the
corporation  or  its  shareholders  for  monetary  damages  for  breach  of  the
director's  fiduciary  duty of care.  The  Company's  Articles of  Incorporation
eliminate  the  liability  of  directors  to the Company to the  fullest  extent
permissible under the CGCL, as such law exists currently or as it may be amended
in the future.  The CGCL does not permit the  elimination of monetary  liability
where such liability is based on: (i) acts or omissions that involve intentional
misconduct  or a knowing and culpable  violation of law;  (ii) acts or omissions
that a director believes to be contrary to the best interests of the corporation
or its  shareholders,  or that  involve the absence of good faith on the part of
the  director;  (iii)  receipt of an  improper  personal  benefit;  (iv) acts or
omissions  that  show  reckless   disregard  for  the  director's  duty  to  the
corporation or its  shareholders,  where the director in the ordinary  course of
performing a director's  duties  should be aware of a risk of serious  injury to
the  corporation or its  shareholders;  (v) acts or omissions that constitute an
unexcused pattern of inattention that amounts to an abdication of the director's
duty to the corporation and its shareholders; (vi) interested party transactions
between  the  corporation  and a  director  in which a  director  has a material
financial  interest;  or (vii)  liability for improper  distributions,  loans or
guarantees.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  The DGCL generally permits  indemnification  of
expenses (including  attorneys' fees) incurred in the defense or settlement of a
derivative  or  third-party  action,  provided  there  is a  determination  by a
majority vote of the  disinterested  directors (even though less than a quorum),
by  independent  legal  counsel  or by  stockholders  that  the  person  seeking
indemnification acted in good faith and in a manner reasonably believed to be in
or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation. Without court approval,
however,  no indemnification  may be made in respect of any derivative action in
which  such  person is  adjudged  liable for  negligence  or  misconduct  in the
performance  of his or her  duty to the  corporation.  The  DGCL  also  requires
indemnification   of  expenses  when  the  individual   being   indemnified  has
successfully defended the action on the merits or otherwise.

         A provision  of the DGCL states  that the  indemnification  provided by
statute  shall not be deemed  exclusive  of any other  rights  under any  bylaw,
agreement,  vote of stockholders or disinterested  directors or otherwise.  As a
result, the DGCL permits the indemnification  agreements such as those presently
in effect  between the Company and its  officers and  directors,  and which such
agreements  will be assumed  by  PerfectData  Delaware  upon  completion  of the
reincorporation.

         The PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate of Incorporation  eliminates the
liability of directors to the fullest extent permissible under the DGCL, as such
law exists currently or as it may be amended in the future. Under the DGCL, such
a provision  may not eliminate or limit  director  monetary  liability  for: (i)
breaches  of  the  director's   duty  of  loyalty  to  the  corporation  or  its
stockholders;  (ii) acts or omissions not in good faith or involving intentional
misconduct or knowing violations of law; (iii) the payment of unlawful dividends
or unlawful stock repurchases or redemptions;  or (iv) transactions in which the
director received an improper  personal benefit.  Such a limitation of liability
provision  also may not  limit a  director's  liability  for  violation  of,  or
otherwise  relieve  PerfectData  Delaware or its directors from the necessity of
complying with,  federal or state  securities laws or affect the availability of
non-monetary remedies such as injunctive relief or rescission.

         Although  there are the  differences  noted above among  California and
Delaware  statutory  provisions with respect to  indemnification,  the Company's
Board of  Directors,  based on the advice of the  Company's  counsel,  Wachtel &
Masyr,  LLP,  does not  believe  that  they are so  material  as to  dissuade  a
shareholder of the Company from consenting to the  reincorporation.  PerfectData
Delaware  will  assume  the  obligations  of the  Company to the  directors  and
officers under their existing indemnification agreements.

Dividends and Repurchases of Shares

         The  Company.   Under  the  CGCL,  a  corporation   may  not  make  any
distribution  (including  dividends,  whether  in cash or  other  property,  and
repurchases of its shares),  unless either the  corporation's  retained earnings
immediately prior to the proposed distribution equal or exceed the amount of the
proposed  distribution or, immediately after giving effect to such distribution,
the  corporation's  assets  (exclusive  of  goodwill,  capitalized  research and
development  expenses  and  deferred  charges)  would be at least equal to 1 1/4
times its liabilities (not including  deferred taxes,  deferred income and other
deferred credits),  and the corporation's current assets would be at least equal
to its  current  liabilities  (or 1 1/4 times  its  current  liabilities  if the
average  earnings  before  taxes on income and before  interest  expense for the
preceding two fiscal years were less than the average  interest expense for such
years).  Under  the  CGCL,  there  are  exceptions  to the  foregoing  rules for
repurchases of shares in connection with certain  rescission actions or pursuant
to certain employee stock plans. The Company's  Articles of Incorporation do not
have any  provision  relating to the payment of dividends or the  repurchase  of
shares, so the provision of the CGCL shall govern.

         PerfectData Delaware. The DGCL permits a corporation to declare and pay
dividends out of surplus or, if there is no surplus,  out of net profits for the
fiscal year in which the dividend is declared  and/or for the  preceding  fiscal
year  as  long  as the  amount  of  capital  of the  corporation  following  the
declaration and payment of the dividend is not less than the aggregate amount of
the  capital  represented  by the issued and  outstanding  stock of all  classes
having a preference  upon the  distribution  of assets.  In  addition,  the DGCL
generally  provides that a corporation  may redeem or repurchase its shares only
if  such  redemption  or  repurchase   would  not  impair  the  capital  of  the
corporation.  PerfectData  Delaware's Certificate of Incorporation will not have
any provision  relating to the payment of dividends or the repurchase of shares,
so the provision of the DGCL shall govern. Although the CGCL provisions relating
to payment  of  dividends  and  repurchase  of shares  may differ  from those of
Delaware,  the Company's  Board of Directors  does not believe that  PerfectData
Delaware will likely be paying  dividends or repurchasing  shares under the DGCL
that it would be forbidden to pay or repurchase under the CGCL.

Shareholder Derivative Suits

         The Company. The CGCL provides that a shareholder bringing a derivative
action on behalf of a corporation  need not have been a shareholder  at the time
of the  transaction  in question,  provided that certain tests are met. The CGCL
also provides that the corporation or the defendant in a derivative  action suit
may make a motion to the court for an order requiring the plaintiff  shareholder
to furnish a security bond. The Company's  Articles of Incorporation do not have
any provision  relating to  derivative  actions,  so the  provisions of the CGCL
shall govern.

         PerfectData Delaware. A derivative action may be brought in Delaware by
a stockholder  of a  corporation.  The DGCL provides that the person must allege
that he was a  stockholder  at the  time  when the  transaction  took  place.  A
stockholder  may  not  sue   derivatively   without  first  demanding  that  the
corporation  bring suit, which demand has been refused,  unless it is shown that
such demand would have been futile.  The PerfectData  Delaware of  Incorporation
will not contain any provision relating to derivative actions, so the provisions
of the DGCL shall govern.

         A  shareholder  of the  Company,  accordingly,  will  lose the right to
institute a derivative  action  against  PerfectData  Delaware with respect to a
transaction which occurred prior to his, her or it becoming a stockholder of the
PerfectData Delaware or its predecessor, i.e., the Company.

Dissenters' or Appraisal Rights

         The  Company.   Under  the  CGCL,  a   shareholder   of  a  corporation
participating  in certain  major  corporation  transactions  may,  under varying
circumstances,  be  entitled  to  dissenters'  rights  pursuant  to  which  such
shareholder  may receive cash in the amount of the fair market value of his, her
or its shares in lieu of the consideration he, she or it would otherwise receive
in the transaction.

         Shareholders of a California  corporation  whose shares are listed on a
national  securities  exchange or on the Nasdaq National Market System generally
do not have such  dissenters'  rights  unless the  holders of at least 5% of the
class of outstanding shares claim the right or unless the corporation or any law
restricts  the  transfer of such  shares.  Dissenters'  rights are  unavailable,
however,  if the  shareholders  of a corporation or the corporation  itself,  or
both,  immediately  prior to the  reorganization  will own immediately after the
reorganization  equity  securities  constituting  more than  five-sixths  of the
voting power of the surviving or acquiring  corporation or its parent entity. In
general, the CGCL affords dissenters' rights in sale of assets  reorganizations.
The Company's shareholders have dissenters' rights as provided in the CGCL.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  Under the DGCL, a shareholder  of a corporation
participating  in certain  major  corporation  transactions  may,  under varying
circumstances,   be  entitled  to  appraisal   rights  pursuant  to  which  such
shareholder  may receive cash in the amount of the fair market value of his, her
or its shares in lieu of the consideration he, she or it would otherwise receive
in the  transaction.  Under the DGCL,  unless the  certificate of  incorporation
otherwise provides,  such appraisal rights are not available (i) with respect to
the sale,  lease or  exchange  of all or  substantially  all of the  assets of a
corporation, (ii) with respect to a merger or consolidation by a corporation the
shares of which are either listed on a national  securities exchange or are held
of record by more than 2,000 holders if such stockholders receive only shares of
the surviving  corporation or shares of any other  corporation  which are either
listed on a national  securities  exchange  or held of record by more than 2,000
holders,  plus cash in lieu of fractional shares or any combination  thereof, or
(iii) to  stockholders  of a  corporation  surviving  a merger if no vote of the
stockholders  of the  surviving  corporation  is  required to approve the merger
because the agreement and plan of merger does not amend the existing certificate
of incorporation,  each share of the surviving corporation  outstanding prior to
the merger is an identical  outstanding or treasury share after the merger,  and
the  number of shares to be issued  in the  merger  does not  exceed  20% of the
shares of the surviving corporation  outstanding immediately prior to the merger
and if certain other conditions are met. The PerfectData Delaware Certificate of
Incorporation is silent with respect to appraisal rights, so that the provisions
of the DGCL govern.

         With  respect to a  statutory  merger,  the  reincorporation  would not
materially affect the dissenters' rights of the Company's shareholders. However,
in the  case  of a  reorganization  other  than a  statutory  merger  which  the
stockholders  will not have to approve in PerfectData  Delaware (see the section
"Required  Shareholder  Votes in Connection with a Business  Combination"  under
this caption  "Comparison of Rights of Holders of the Company's and  PerfectData
Delaware's  Common  Stock"),  or in the  case  of a sale  of  assets  not in the
ordinary course of business,  a shareholder of the Company will lose his, her or
its right to dissent that the  shareholder  would have had in the Company  under
the  CGCL.  Thus,  were  the  Company  currently  a  Delaware  corporation,  its
shareholders would not have dissenters' rights with respect to the proposed sale
to Spray.

Dissolution

         The Company.  Under the CGCL,  shareholders  holding 50% or more of the
total voting power may authorize a  corporation's  dissolution,  with or without
the approval of the corporation's board of directors,  and this right may not be
modified by the articles of incorporation.

         PerfectData  Delaware.  Under the DGCL,  unless the board of  directors
approves  the  proposal  to  dissolve,  the  dissolution  must  be  approved  by
stockholders holding 100% of the total voting power of the corporation.  Only if
the dissolution of a Delaware corporation is initiated by the board of directors
may it be approved by a simple majority of the  corporation's  stockholders.  In
the event of such a  board-initiated  dissolution,  the DGCL  allows a  Delaware
corporation  to include in its  certificate  of  incorporation  a  supermajority
voting  requirement in connection with  dissolutions.  The PerfectData  Delaware
Certificate of Incorporation  contains no such supermajority voting requirement,
and a majority of shares  voting at a meeting at which a quorum is present would
be  sufficient  to  approve a  dissolution  of  PerfectData  Delaware  which had
previously been approved by its board of directors.  Accordingly, except for the
loss  of the  right  of the  holders  of 50% or more of the  voting  power  in a
California  corporation to vote for its dissolution where the board of directors
has not so authorized the dissolution, there will be no change for the Company's
shareholders as a result of the reincorporation.

         In addition to the changes in  shareholders'  rights  resulting  in the
reincorporation,  the proposed PerfectData Delaware Certificate of Incorporation
and Bylaws  contain  some  important  differences  from the Company  Articles of
Incorporation  and Bylaws.  For a description of these  differences,  please see
"Description of the Company and PerfectData  Delaware Capital Stock." A copy of
the  PerfectData  Delaware  Certificate  of  Incorporation  is  attached to this
Consent  Solicitation  Statement  as Appendix  F, and a copy of the  PerfectData
Delaware Bylaws is attached to this Consent  Solicitation  Statement as Appendix
G. You are urged to read the Certificate of  Incorporation  and Bylaws carefully
and in their entirety before making a decision on the reincorporation.

                         DESCRIPTION OF THE COMPANY AND
                       PERFECTDATA DELAWARE CAPITAL STOCK

         The following  summary of the current  terms of the  Company's  capital
stock  and the terms of  PerfectData  Delaware's  capital  stock to be in effect
after the  completion  of the  reincorporation  describes  every  term which the
Company,  based on the  advice  of its  counsel,  Wachtel  & Masyr,  LLP,  deems
material to a shareholder.  For a complete  description  you should refer to the
Company's  Articles  of  Incorporation  and  Bylaws and  PerfectData  Delaware's
Certificate of  Incorporation  and Bylaws.  Copies of the Company's  Articles of
Incorporation  and Bylaws will be sent to holders of shares of the Common  Stock
upon  request.  A request may be made to the Company as described in the section
"Contact Information" under the caption "Miscellaneous" elsewhere in the Consent
Solicitation   Statement.   Copies  of  PerfectData  Delaware's  Certificate  of
Incorporation and Bylaws are attached to this Consent Solicitation  Statement as
Appendix F and Appendix G,  respectively.  Except for the  difference in the par
value,  which the Company believes will not adversely affect  shareholders,  the
capital stock of the Company and PerfectData Delaware are similar.

The Company

         Authorized  Capital  Stock.  The  Company's  authorized  capital  stock
consists  of  10,000,000  shares of Common  Stock,  no par value per share,  and
2,000,000 shares of "blank check" Preferred Stock, no par value per share.

         Common Stock.  Subject to the rights of holders of Preferred  Stock, if
any,  holders of shares of the Common Stock are  entitled to share  equally on a
per share basis in such  dividends  as may be declared by the Board of Directors
out of funds  legally  available  therefor.  There are presently no plans to pay
dividends  with respect to the shares of the Common  Stock.  Upon the  Company's
liquidation,  dissolution  or winding up,  after  payment of  creditors  and the
holders of any of its senior securities,  including Preferred Stock, if any, the
Company's assets will be divided pro rata on a per share basis among the holders
of the  shares of the  Common  Stock.  The  Common  Stock is not  subject to any
liability  for  further  assessments.  There are no  conversions  or  redemption
privileges nor any sinking fund  provisions with respect to the Common Stock and
the Common Stock is not subject to call.  The holders of the Common Stock do not
have any pre-emptive or other subscription rights.

         Holders of shares of the Common Stock are entitled to cast one vote for
each  share  held  at all  shareholders'  meetings  for  all  purposes.  If at a
shareholder meeting, a shareholder elects to vote his or her shares cumulatively
for  directors,  other  shareholders  may  also  do so.  All of the  issued  and
outstanding   shares  of  common  stock  are  fully  paid,  validly  issued  and
non-assessable.

         Preferred Stock. The Company's certificate of incorporation  authorizes
2,000,000 shares of "blank check"  Preferred Stock. The Board of Directors has
the authority,  without further action by the holders of the outstanding  shares
of the Common Stock, to issue shares of Preferred Stock from time to time in one
or more classes or series, to fix the number of shares constituting any class or
series and the stated value thereof, if different from the par value, and to fix
the terms of any such  series  or class,  including  dividend  rights,  dividend
rates,  conversion  or  exchange  rights,  voting  rights,  rights  and terms of
redemption  (including  sinking fund  provisions),  the redemption price and the
liquidation preference of such class or series.

PerfectData Delaware

         Following  the  reincorporation  transaction,   PerfectData  Delaware's
authorized  capital  stock will consist of  55,000,000  shares of common  stock,
$0.01 par value per share,  and 2,000,000  shares of "blank  check"  preferred
stock, par value $.01 per share.

         Authorized Capital Stock. Subject to the rights of holders of preferred
stock, if any,  holders of shares of the  PerfectData  Delaware common stock are
entitled  to share  equally  on a per share  basis in such  dividends  as may be
declared by the  PerfectData  Delaware  board of directors  out of funds legally
available  therefor.  There are presently no plans to pay dividends with respect
to the shares of  PerfectData  Delaware  common stock.  Until an  acquisition or
merger  candidate is selected and the transaction is  consummated,  the Board of
Directors  can  only  speculate  if a  dividend  would  be paid by the  combined
companies.  Upon PerfectData Delaware's liquidation,  dissolution or winding up,
after  payment of  creditors  and the  holders of any of its senior  securities,
including preferred stock, if any, PerfectData Delaware's assets will be divided
pro rata on a per share  basis  among the  holders  of the  shares of its common
stock. The PerfectData Delaware common stock is not subject to any liability for
further  assessments.  There are no conversion or redemption  privileges nor any
sinking fund provisions with respect to the common stock and the common stock is
not subject to call. The holders of common stock do not have any  pre-emptive or
other subscription rights.

         Holders  of shares of common  stock are  entitled  to cast one vote for
each share held at all  stockholders'  meetings for all purposes,  including the
election of directors. The common stock does not have cumulative voting rights.

         All of the  issued  and  outstanding  shares of common  stock are fully
paid, validly issued and non-assessable.

         Preferred Stock.  PerfectData  Delaware's  certificate of incorporation
authorizes  2,000,000 shares of "blank check" preferred stock. The PerfectData
Delaware  board of directors has the  authority,  without  further action by the
holders of the outstanding common stock, to issue shares of preferred stock from
time to time in one or more  classes  or  series,  to fix the  number  of shares
constituting any class or series and the stated value thereof, if different from
the par  value,  and to fix the terms of any such  series  or  class,  including
dividend rights,  dividend rates,  conversion or exchange rights, voting rights,
rights  and  terms  of  redemption  (including  sinking  fund  provisions),  the
redemption  price  and the  liquidation  preference  of such  class  or  series.
DISSENTERS' RIGHTS

         A shareholder of the Company shall have a right to receive  payment for
his, her or its shares of the Common Stock if (1) the shareholders  approve,  by
consents,  either or both of the two proposals as to which consent is requested,
i.e.,  the  proposed  sale to  Spray  by the  Company  of its  current  business
operations and the proposed reincorporation, (2) the shareholder dissents in the
manner  described  under this  caption and (3) the Company  does not abandon the
sale and/or the reincorporation, whichever is or are applicable.

         Under the California General  Corporation Law, any holder of the Common
Stock has the right to  dissent  as to either  proposal  and to be paid the fair
market  value for his,  her or its shares of the Common  Stock.  The fair market
value will be  determined  as of the day before  the first  announcement  of the
proposed sale  transaction (a press release was issued on October 8, 2003).  The
last  reported  sale price of the Common  Stock on October 7, 2003 was $1.05 per
share; however, the quoted market price is not necessarily deemed to be the fair
market value for purposes of dissenters'  rights. In making such  determination,
the Company,  the dissenting  shareholders  and, if  applicable,  a court are to
exclude any  appreciation or depreciation to the fair market value of the shares
as a  consequence  of  the  proposed  sale  to  Spray  of its  current  business
operations or the then pending SuperCom transaction.  An adjustment will be made
for any stock split,  reverse stock split or share dividend thereafter affected.
No such transaction is currently contemplated.

         If such  shareholder is not able to reach an agreement with the Company
as to the fair market value of his, her or its shares of the Common Stock,  such
shareholder  has the  right  to have the fair  market  value of his,  her or its
shares of the Common Stock judicially determined, and paid to the shareholder in
cash,  together with interest in some  instances,  provided that the shareholder
fully  complies  with  the  provisions  of  Sections  1300  through  1312 of the
California  General  Corporation  Law. A copy of these provisions is attached to
this Consent Solicitation Statement as Appendix C.

         Making  sure  that a  shareholder  actually  perfects  his,  her or its
dissenters'  rights can be  complicated.  The procedural  rules are specific and
must be followed  precisely.  Failure to comply with the  procedure  may cause a
termination or waiver of the dissenters'  rights.  The following  information is
intended  as a  brief  summary  of the  material  provisions  of  the  statutory
procedures  a  shareholder  must  follow  in order to  perfect  his,  her or its
dissenters'  rights.  Shareholders  who or which  desire to dissent are urged to
review  Appendix C for the  complete  procedure.  The Company  will not give the
dissenting  shareholder  any notice  other  than as  described  in this  Consent
Solicitation  Statement and as required by the  California  General  Corporation
Law.

         If you are a  shareholder  and you wish to  exercise  your  dissenters'
rights,  you must satisfy the provisions of the California  General  Corporation
Law attached as Appendix C which require the following:

         You must refrain from  consenting  to the proposed sale to Spray and/or
the proposed reincorporation.  You may dissent as to either or as to both of the
proposals  as to  which  your  consent  is being  sought.  You must not vote (by
consent)  any of your shares of the Common Stock for approval of the proposal or
proposals as to which you wish to dissent. If you consent with respect to any of
your shares of the Common  Stock in favor of that  proposal or  proposals,  this
will  terminate  your right to dissent.  Your signing and  returning the consent
with a check of the Against or Abstain box or boxes,  or your  failure to return
the consent, are both equivalent to a vote against for the purpose of preserving
your dissenters' rights.

         Written notice from the Company: Within ten days after the consents are
given to approve either or both of the proposals,  the Company must give written
notice  to you and  each  other  shareholder  who has  fully  complied  with the
conditions of the California  General  Corporation Law stating its determination
as to the fair market value of the dissenting  shares,  forwarding copies of the
relevant  dissenters' rights sections of the California General  Corporation Law
and briefly describing the procedures which the dissenting shareholder must then
follow  if the  dissenting  shareholder  desires  to  exercise  his,  her or its
dissenters'  rights. This constitutes an offer by the Company to pay that amount
in full satisfaction of the dissenters' rights.

         You must file a written  notice of  intention  to demand to be paid the
fair  market  value of your  shares:  You must  deliver to the Company a written
notice of  intention  to demand to be paid the fair market  value of your shares
within 30 days from the date of the notice  from the  Company  described  in the
preceding subsection.  Your failure to make such demand within the 30-day period
results in the loss of your dissenters' right to be paid.

         In your  written  notice of demand  you must state the number of shares
held of record as to which you request  purchase by the Company.  You may accept
the  Company's  offer as to its  determination  of the fair market value of your
shares.  If you do, the Company will pay you within 30 days of your  acceptance.
If you do not accept the Company's offer, you, as a dissenting shareholder, must
state what you claim to be the fair market value of the dissenting  shares as of
the day preceding the first announcement of the proposed sale transaction.  This
statement of fair market value constitutes an offer by you to sell the shares at
such  price.  Your  written  notice  should also  specify  your name and mailing
address.

         A written  notice  of  intention  to demand to be paid the fair  market
value of your shares of the Common  Stock is only  effective if it is signed by,
or for, the shareholder of record who owns such shares at the time the demand is
made. The demand must be signed as the shareholder's  name appears on the Common
Stock certificates(s).  If you are the beneficial owner of the Common Stock, but
not the  shareholder of record,  you must have the  shareholder of record sign a
written  notice of  intention to demand to be paid the fair market value of your
shares.

         If you own the Common Stock in a fiduciary capacity, such as a trustee,
guardian  or  custodian,  you must  disclose  the fact that you are  signing the
notice of intention to demand to be paid the fair market value of your shares in
that capacity.

         If you own the  Common  Stock with more than one  person,  such as in a
joint  tenancy or a tenancy in common,  all the owners must sign, or have signed
for them by an  authorized  agent,  the notice of intention to demand to be paid
the fair market value of your shares. An authorized  agent,  which could include
one or more of the joint  owners,  may sign the notice of intention to demand to
be paid the fair  market  value of your  shares  for a  shareholder  of  record;
however,  the agent must expressly disclose who the shareholder of record is and
that the agent is signing the demand as that shareholder's agent.

         If you are a record  owner,  such as a  broker-dealer,  which holds the
Common  Stock as a nominee for others,  you may  exercise a right to be paid the
fair market value of your shares with respect to the shares held for one or more
beneficial owners,  while not exercising such right for other beneficial owners.
In such a case,  you should specify in the written notice of intention to demand
the number of shares as to which you intend to demand  appraisal.  If you do not
expressly  specify the number of shares, we will assume that your written notice
covers all the shares of the Common Stock that are registered in your name.

         If you are a shareholder  who intends to exercise  dissenters'  rights,
you should mail or otherwise  deliver a written notice of intention to demand to
be paid the fair market value of your shares to:

                             PerfectData Corporation
                          1445 East Los Angeles Avenue
                                    Suite 208
                          Simi Valley, California 93065
                        Attn: Irene J. Marino, Secretary

         Surrender your stock certificate(s): Within 30 days after the notice by
the Company is mailed, you must deliver your stock certificate(s) to the Company
so that the Company may make a notation on the  certificate(s)  reflecting  your
demand. If you fail to submit your stock  certificates(s)  to the Company within
this time frame,  you will lose your right to be paid the fair  market  value of
your shares.

         You must continuously hold your shares: You must continuously hold your
shares of the Common  Stock from the date you file the  notice of  intention  to
demand to be paid the fair market value of your shares through at least the date
you surrender your shares for endorsement  after the notice by the Company as to
approval of the transaction is sent to you.

         Payment period:  As noted above,  each of the Company and you have made
offers as to the fair market  value of your  dissenting  shares.  If you and the
Company are able to agree on an amount, the Company is obligated to pay you that
amount within 30 days after such  determination,  provided  that you  surrender,
against  payment,  your  certificate(s)  for  shares  of the  Common  Stock  for
cancellation.

         Commencement  of  Litigation:  If you are not  able to  agree  with the
Company  as to the fair value of your  shares,  then,  within  six months  after
notice of the  approval of the sale to Spray was mailed to you, you may commence
an  action  against  the  Company  in the  Superior  Court of  California  for a
determination of the fair market value of your shares.

         You may, as an alternative,  intervene in any pending action by another
dissenting  shareholder.  The  Company  may move to  consolidate  all actions by
dissenting shareholders.

         Appraisal of shares:  If the court  determines that you are entitled to
dissenters'  rights,  the court will  determine  the value of your shares of the
Common  Stock as of the day prior to the date of the first  announcement  of the
transactions. To determine the fair value of the shares, the court will consider
all relevant  factors except for any  appreciation  or  depreciation to the fair
market value of the shares due to the anticipation or accomplishment of the sale
to Spray of the Company's business or the then pending SuperCom transaction. The
court may appoint an appraiser or  appraisers  to make the  determination  as to
fair market value of your shares.  After the court  determines the fair value of
the shares,  it will direct the Company to pay that value to you.  The court can
also direct the  Company to pay  interest  at the legal rate for  judgments.  In
order to receive  payment for your shares,  you must then  surrender  your stock
certificates to the Company.

         The court could  determine  that the fair market value of our shares is
more  than,  the  same  as,  or less  than the  quoted  market  price on the day
preceding the first  announcement of the Spray transaction  (i.e.,  $1.05) or on
the date of its  decision.  In other  words,  if you  demand to be paid the fair
market value of your shares,  you could receive less  consideration  than if you
elect to sell your shares in the over-the-counter market.

         Costs and expenses of appraisal proceeding:  The costs of the appraisal
proceeding  (including the cost of any  appraiser)  may be assessed  against the
Company and the shareholders  participating in the appraisal  proceeding in such
manner as the court deems  equitable  under the  circumstances.  You may request
that the court allocate the expenses of the appraisal action incurred by you pro
rata  against  the  value  of all  the  shares  held  by  all  of the  Company's
shareholders entitled to dissenters' rights.

         If the  appraisal by the court exceeds the price offered by the Company
by 125%, then the latter must pay the costs  (including in the discretion of the
court  attorneys'  fees, fees of expert  witnesses and interest at legal rate of
judgments for such dissenters' rights actions).

         Loss of  shareholder's  rights:  Until  the fair  market  value of your
dissenters' shares is determined, you continue to have all rights and privileges
incident to such shares.  You can,  however,  lose your  dissenting  shareholder
status  if you do not  file  an  action,  or  intervene  in  another  dissenting
shareholder's action, within the statutory period or if you transfer your shares
before they are  endorsed as  dissenters'  shares.  Additionally,  a  dissenting
shareholder  may not  withdraw a demand for  payment  without the consent of the
Company.

                                  MISCELLANEOUS

Solicitation

         The  solicitation  of consents on the enclosed form of consents is made
by and on behalf of the Board of  Directors  of the Company and the cost of this
solicitation is being paid by the Company.  In addition to the use of the mails,
consents may be solicited  personally,  or by  telephone  or  telegraph,  by the
officers or directors of the  Company.  The Company has not engaged,  and has no
intention to engage,  any third party not affiliated with the Company to solicit
consents.

Shareholder Proposals

         The Company held its last Annual Meeting of Shareholders on December 6,
2002,  delayed from the usual meeting date for the  Company's  fiscal year ended
March 31, 2002 because of the then pending acquisition transaction with GraphCo.
Normally the Board would have scheduled the meeting  approximately 30 days after
the audited  financial  statements for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2002 were
made available for mailing to  shareholders.  The Board also delayed calling its
Annual Meeting of Shareholders for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003 in order
to include approval of the SuperCom  transaction in the proposals to be voted on
by the Company's shareholders.  See the section "Terminated  Transactions" under
the caption "Proposed Sale Transaction"  elsewhere in this Consent  Solicitation
Statement  for  information  as to both  such  transactions.  In  order  to keep
expenses at a minimum the Board currently  intends to call the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders  for the fiscal  year  ending  March 31,  2004  ("fiscal  2004") in
October 2004.  Shareholders'  proposals  for  inclusion in the  Company's  proxy
statement  for the  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders  for  fiscal  2004 must be
received no later than a reasonable time before the Company prints and mails its
proxy  material for such Annual  Meeting.  If a shareholder  intends to submit a
proposal  for  consideration  at such  Annual  Meeting  by means  other than the
inclusion  of the  proposal in the  Company's  proxy  statement  for such Annual
Meeting, the shareholder must notify the Company of such intention no later than
a  reasonable  time before the Company  prints and mails its proxy  material for
such  Annual  Meeting,  or  risk  management  exercising   discretionary  voting
authority  with respect to the  management  proxies to defeat such proposal when
and if  presented  at such Annual  Meeting.  The Company  currently  anticipates
mailing  the  proxy  material  for such  Annual  Meeting  on or  before  Friday,
September 17, 2004. The Company shall advise its  shareholders  of any change in
the  contemplated  mailing date for its proxy material for the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders for fiscal 2004 by notice in its earliest possible Quarterly Report
on Form 10-QSB or by other appropriate notice.

Contact Information

         The office of the Company is located at 1445 East Los  Angeles  Avenue,
Suite 208,  Simi  Valley,  CA 93065.  Its  telephone  number is (805)  581-4000.
Inquiries may be directed by mail or telephone to Harris A. Shapiro, Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive Officer of the Company.

         The  office of Spray is  located at 1323  Conshohocken  Road,  Plymouth
Meeting,  PA 19462.  Its telephone  number is (610)  277-1010.  Inquiries may be
directed by mail or telephone to Bart Bastian, President of Spray.

Financial Data

         The Company's audited financial statements and the related management's
discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of operations for the
fiscal  years  ended  March  31,  2004  and  2003 are  annexed  to this  Consent
Solicitation Statement as Appendix D.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

                                              /s/ Irene J. Marino
                                              Irene J. Marino
                                              Secretary
July __, 2004




                                                                      Appendix A

                            ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT

        THIS ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT (the "Agreement") is made and entered
into as of the 3rd day of October, 2003 between PerfectData Corporation, a
California corporation (the "Seller"), and Spray Products Corporation, a
Pennsylvania corporation (the "Purchaser").

                              W I T N E S S E T H:

        WHEREAS, the Seller is engaged in the business (the "Business") of
computer/office care and cleansing products; and

        WHEREAS, the Seller desires to sell all of its inventory and other
assets related to the Business to the Purchaser, and the Purchaser desires to
acquire such assets.

        NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual representations,
warranties, covenants and agreements, and upon the terms and conditions
hereinafter set forth, the parties do hereby agree as follows:

                                    ARTICLE 1
                                PURCHASE AND SALE

        1.1 Purchase of Assets. Subject to the terms and conditions of this
Agreement, the Seller hereby agrees to sell, transfer, convey, assign and
deliver to the Purchaser, and the Purchaser hereby agrees to purchase, acquire
and accept from the Seller:

            1.1.1 All inventories of the Seller, including finished goods, raw
materials and work in process existing on the Closing Date (as defined below)
(the "Inventory");

            1.1.2 The following books and records of the Seller, including
customer lists and customer data, supplier lists and supplier data and other
operating data, files, credit information, records of sales and inventory data,
know how, computer software (including source codes and object codes), product
development documentation product development procedures, computer generated
product designs and artwork, catalogues, sales literature displays, and
advertising materials, artwork used in the Business, Non-Disclosure Agreements,
Confidentiality Agreements, telephone numbers, SKU numbers, the trade name
"PerfectData Corporation" and all other names utilized in connection with the
Business and all derivations thereof and other intangibles related to the
Business ( the "Intangibles"); provided, however, that the Seller or its
representative shall have the right, upon reasonable notice and during regular
business hours, for five (5) years after the Closing (as hereinafter defined),
to enter the premises of the Purchaser to review and copy any such books and
records for the purpose of the compilation of the financial records of the
Seller for use in the preparation of any required tax returns, in response to
any federal and/or state tax auditor, for use in the preparation of any report
to be filed pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or any
securities inquiry.

                                                                             A-1


            1.1.3 The Seller's goodwill relating to the Business (the
"Goodwill");

            1.1.4 Such accounts receivable of the Seller as to which the
Purchaser and the Seller may mutually agree upon (such purchased receivables
shall be referred to herein as the "Receivables");

            1.1.5 all of the Seller's machinery and equipment, office furniture,
supplies, fixed assets, fixtures and equipment, warehouse equipment, tooling,
molds, and computer hardware except for such pieces of equipment as the Seller
reasonably determines is necessary for the establishment of a new office (the
"Equipment");

            1.1.6 all intellectual property related to the Business, including,
but not limited to, software, patents, pending patent applications, patents in
development, copyrights, pending copyright applications, copyrights in
development and all derivative works thereof, trademarks, trade names, logos,
service marks, assumed or fictitious names, trade secrets, manufacturing
know-how, and any and all websites related in whole or in part to the Business
and the data and intellectual property related thereto (collectively, the
"Intellectual Property").

The Inventory, Intangibles, Goodwill, Receivables, Equipment and Intellectual
Property are collectively referred to herein as the "Purchased Assets".

        1.2 Retained Assets. Except for the Purchased Assets, the Purchaser is
not purchasing any other assets of the Seller including, the Retained Assets.
The term "Retained Assets" shall mean the following assets of the Seller as of
the Closing Date which, although they relate to the Business, are not Purchased
Assets and are to be retained by the Seller: (a) the Seller's franchise to be a
corporation, Certificate of Incorporation, by-laws, minute books, company seals
and other company records having to do with the organization and capitalization
of the Seller; (b) all canceled checks, bank statements and tax returns of the
Seller relating to the Business; (c) any contract, agreement or lease of the
Seller which is not assumed by the Purchaser hereunder; (d) the Seller's
insurance policies including the cash value of life insurance policies; (e) the
Seller's cash and cash equivalents; (f) the Seller's accounts, notes and
receivables, other than the Receivables; (g) taxes and deposits; (h) all
accounting books and records of the Seller and (i) all other assets not
identified herein as the "Purchased Assets".

        1.3 Purchase Price.

            1.3.1 The total consideration for the Purchased Assets (the
"Purchase Price") shall be an amount equal to the difference of:

                  1.3.1.1 the Seller's landed cost for the Inventory (excluding
                          obsolete items) (the "Inventory Value"); plus

                  1.3.1.2 An amount equal to the collectible Receivables that,
                          as of the Closing Date, are no older than sixty-five
                          (65)days; plus

                  1.3.1.3 The sum of One Hundred Thousand ($100,000.00) Dollars;
                          less:

                                                                             A-2

                  1.3.1.4 The dollar amount of the Assumed Liabilities (as
                          hereinafter defined).

            1.3.2 Allocation of Purchase Price. The Purchase Price shall
be allocated prior to the Closing in accordance with Section 1060 of the
Internal Revenue Code. The Purchaser and the Seller shall cooperate with each
other in the preparation and filing of I.R.S. Form 8594 in connection with the
Purchase Price allocation. Neither the Purchaser nor the Seller, nor any of
their respective affiliates, shall take any position (whether in financial
statements, audits, tax returns or otherwise) which is inconsistent with the
allocation of the consideration unless required to do so by applicable law or
regulation.


            1.3.3 Within seven (7) days prior to the Closing, the Seller and the
Purchaser shall jointly conduct a physical count of the Inventory in order to
determine the Inventory Value.

            1.3.4 The Purchase Price shall be payable at the Closing by the
Purchaser to the Seller as follows:

                  1.3.4.1 An amount equal to the Purchase Price less the
Holdback Amount (as hereinafter defined) shall be paid via bank or certified
check.

                  1.3.4.2 An amount equal to ten (10%) percent of the Purchase
Price (the "Holdback Amount") shall be delivered to Wachtel & Masyr, LLP (the
"Escrow Agent").

        1.4 Post-Closing Adjustment. At any time after seventy-five (75) days
after the Closing, but no later than ninety (90) days after the Closing, the
Purchaser shall have the right to put (the "Put") any uncollected Receivables
(the "Assigned Receivable") to the Seller. In the event of a Put, the Seller
shall deliver to the Purchaser, within thirty (30) days after the date of such
Put, an amount equal to the face-dollar amount of such Assigned Receivable(s).
In the event that Seller does not timely deliver the value of the Assigned
Receivable to the Purchaser, the Purchaser shall send written notice to the
Escrow Agent and the Seller of such event, and the Escrow Agent shall be
instructed to deliver an amount equal to the face amount of the Assigned
Receivable to the Purchaser. The terms of the escrow herein are set forth in the
Escrow Agreement by and among the Purchaser, the Seller and the Escrow Agent,
the form of which is attached hereto as Exhibit A. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Purchaser shall have no right to Put any Receivable that is
generated during such period that the Purchaser is managing the Business,
pursuant to Section 5.6 herein.

        1.5 Assumption of Liabilities and Obligations. The Purchaser shall
assume and be responsible for all trade payables of the Seller at the Closing
(the "Assumed Liabilities"). The parties agree that the Purchaser is not
assuming any liability or obligation of the Seller other than the Assumed
Liabilities.

        1.6 Preparation of the Purchased Assets. The parties acknowledge that
the Purchaser shall make all arrangements and shall be responsible for all costs
incurred in connection with the packaging and transport of the Purchased Assets
from the Seller to the Purchaser.

                                                                             A-3

                                    ARTICLE 2
                    REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF SELLER

        Seller represents and warrants to Purchaser as follows:

        2.1 Organization of the Seller. The Seller is a corporation duly
incorporated, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the State
of California, with all requisite power and authority to own, lease and operate
its properties and to carry on the Business as it is now being conducted. The
Seller is qualified or licensed as a foreign entity in each jurisdiction in
which it is required as a result of the conduct of the Business or location of
the property owned, leased or operated by it in connection with the Business
except where failure to be so qualified or licensed would not have a material
adverse effect on the value of the Purchased Assets, taken as a whole (a
"Material Adverse Effect").

        2.2 Authorization of the Seller. The Seller has full power, capacity and
authority to execute this Agreement and all other agreements and documents
contemplated hereby. The execution and delivery of this Agreement and such other
agreements and documents by the Seller and the consummation by the Seller of the
transactions contemplated hereby have been duly authorized and no other action
on the part of the Seller is necessary to authorize the transactions
contemplated hereby. This Agreement has been duly executed and delivered by the
Seller and constitutes the valid and binding obligation of the Seller,
enforceable in accordance with its terms, except that (i) enforcement may be
subject to (A) bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium or similar
laws affecting creditors' rights generally, and (B) proper shareholder and
regulatory consent and (ii) the remedies of specific performance and injunctive
relief are subject to certain equitable defenses and to the discretion of the
court before which any proceedings may be brought.

        2.3 No Violations. The execution, delivery and performance of this
Agreement and the other agreements and documents contemplated hereby by the
Seller and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby will not (i)
violate any provision of the Certificate of Incorporation or by-laws of the
Seller, (ii) violate any statute, rule, regulation, order or decree of any
public body or authority by which the Seller or its properties or assets are
bound, or (iii) result in a violation or breach of, or constitute a default
under, or result in the creation of any lien, mortgage, pledge, security
interest, charge, claim, option or other encumbrance (collectively, the "Liens")
upon, or create any rights of termination, cancellation or acceleration in any
person with respect to any license, franchise or permit of the Seller, or any
other agreement, contract, indenture, mortgage or instrument to which the Seller
is a party or by which any of its properties or assets is bound except (in the
case of (ii) and (iii)) where any such violation, breach or default would not
have a Material Adverse Effect on the Seller.

         2.4 Consents.  Except for the consent of the shareholders of the Seller
pursuant  to the  California  General  Corporation  Law and the  approval of the
Securities and Exchange Commission,  no consent, approval or other authorization
of any  governmental  authority or third party, is required as a result of or in
connection  with the execution and delivery of (i) this  Agreement and the other
agreements and documents to be executed by the Seller in connection  herewith or
(ii) the  consummation by the Seller of the  transactions  contemplated  hereby,
except

                                                                             A-4


for those that have been, or prior to the Closing will be,  obtained.  At
the Closing,  the Seller  shall be in complete  compliance  with all  applicable
laws, rules, regulations,  including health,  environmental,  building,  zoning,
safety and labor.

        2.5 Litigation and Related Matters. There are no actions, suits,
proceedings, investigations or grievances pending or, to the knowledge of the
Seller, threatened against the Seller, the Business or the Purchased Assets, at
law or in equity, before or by any court or any federal, state, municipal or
other governmental department, commission, board, bureau, agency or
instrumentality, domestic or foreign (i) that could reasonably be expected to
affect the transactions contemplated hereby or (ii) relating to the Business or
the Purchased Assets.

        2.6 Title. At the Closing, the Seller will deliver the Purchased Assets
free and clear of all Liens.

        2.7 Disclaimers. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR IN THIS AGREEMENT, ALL
OF THE PURCHASED ASSETS (AS DEFINED) ARE BEING SOLD AND TRANSFERRED TO THE
PURCHASER "AS IS" AND ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR USE, ARE EXCLUDED FROM THE SALE AND TRANSFER
OF THE PURCHASED ASSETS. THE SELLER MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES OF
ANY NATURE WITH RESPECT TO THE PURCHASED ASSETS (EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH
IN ARTICLE II) OR THE FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE BUSINESS, INCLUDING BUT NOT
LIMITED TO THE LEVEL OF SALES, PROFITABILITY, INCOME OR FUTURE PROSPECTS. THE
PURCHASER ACKNOWLEDGES THAT ANY FINANCIAL OR OPERATING INFORMATION RELATING TO
THE SELLER'S OPERATION OF THE BUSINESS WAS PROVIDED SOLELY FOR INFORMATIONAL
PURPOSES AND THAT THE SELLER HAS NO RESPONSIBILITY TO THE PURCHASER WITH RESPECT
TO SUCH FINANCIAL OR OPERATING INFORMATION.

                                    ARTICLE 3
                   REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF PURCHASER

        The Purchaser represents and warrants to the Seller as follows:

        3.1 Corporate Existence. The Purchaser is a corporation duly organized,
validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the state of its
incorporation, with all requisite corporate power and authority to own, lease
and operate its properties and to carry on its business as now being conducted.
The Purchaser is qualified or licensed as a foreign corporation in each
jurisdiction in which it is required as a result of the character of its
business or location of the property owned, leased or operated by it in
connection with its business except where failure to be so qualified or licensed
would not have a material adverse effect on the Purchaser.

        3.2 Authorization of Purchaser. The Purchaser has full corporate power,
capacity and authority to execute this Agreement and all other agreements and
documents contemplated hereby. The execution and delivery of this Agreement and
such other agreements and documents
                                                                             A-5



by the  Purchaser  and the  consummation  by the  Purchaser of the  transactions
contemplated  hereby have been duly authorized and no other corporate  action on
the  part  of  the  Purchaser  is  necessary  to  authorize   the   transactions
contemplated  hereby. This Agreement has been duly executed and delivered by the
Purchaser and  constitutes  the valid and binding  obligation of the  Purchaser,
enforceable in accordance  with its terms,  except that (i)  enforcement  may be
subject to bankruptcy,  insolvency,  reorganization,  moratorium or similar laws
affecting  creditors'  rights  generally,  and (ii)  the  remedies  of  specific
performance and injunctive relief arc subject to certain equitable  defenses and
to the discretion of the court before which any proceedings may be brought.

        3.3 No Violations. The execution and delivery of this Agreement and the
other agreements and documents contemplated hereby by the Purchaser and the
consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby will not (i) violate any
provision of the certificate of incorporation or bylaws of the Purchaser, (ii)
violate any statute, rule, regulation, order or decree of any public body or
authority by which the Purchaser or its properties or assets are bound, or (iii)
result in a violation or breach of, or constitute a default under or result in
the creation of any Lien upon, or create any rights of termination, cancellation
or acceleration in any person with respect to, any agreement, contract,
indenture, mortgage or instrument to which the Purchaser is a party or any of
its properties or assets is bound except (in the case of (ii) and (iii)) where
any such violation, breach or default would not have a material adverse effect
on the Purchaser.

        3.4 Consents. No consent, approval or other authorization of any
governmental authority or third party is required as a result of or in
connection with the execution and delivery of (i) this Agreement and the other
agreements and documents to be executed by the Purchaser in connection herewith
or (ii) the consummation by the Purchaser of the transactions contemplated
hereby, except for those that have been, or prior to the Closing will be,
obtained.

                                    ARTICLE 4
                                    COVENANTS

        4.1 Course of Conduct by the Seller. From the date hereof through the
Closing Date, except as may be first approved in writing by the Purchaser or as
otherwise permitted or contemplated by this Agreement, the Business shall be
conducted only in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice,
and the Seller shall comply with the following covenants:

            4.1.1 Disposition of Assets. The Seller shall not sell, transfer or
otherwise dispose of any part of the Purchased Assets, tangible or intangible,
except for inventory and supplies, disposed of or consumed in the ordinary
course of business.

            4.1.2 Relations with Suppliers and Customers. The Seller will use
commercially reasonable efforts to preserve its relationships with material
suppliers, customers and others having material business dealings with it with
respect to the Business.

            4.1.3 Liens. The Seller will not mortgage, pledge, encumber, create
or allow any Liens not existing on the date hereof upon any of the Purchased
Assets.
                                                                             A-6


        4.2 Approvals and Consents. Each party shall use its reasonable efforts
(i) to cause all conditions to the obligations of the other party under this
Agreement over which it is able to exercise influence or control to be satisfied
prior to the Closing Date and (ii) to obtain promptly and to comply with all
requisite statutory, regulatory or court approvals, third party releases and
consents, and other requirements necessary for the valid and legal consummation
of the transactions contemplated hereby.

        4.3 Investigations. The Seller shall provide the Purchaser and its
representatives and agents such access to the books and records of the Seller
and furnish to the Purchaser such financial and operating data and other
information with respect to the Purchased Assets as Purchaser may reasonably
request from time to time. If the transactions provided for herein are not
consummated, the provisions of the Confidentiality Agreement, dated as of May
30, 2003 between the Seller and the Purchaser shall be binding on the Purchaser
as if such Confidentiality Agreement was entered into as of the date hereof.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Purchaser acknowledges that it has conducted
its due diligence with respect to the Seller the Business and the Purchased
Assets and it may not terminate this Agreement based on further due diligence.

        4.4 No Solicitation. Except with respect to the Purchaser and its
affiliates, after the date hereof, until the earlier of the Closing or the
termination of this Agreement, the Seller shall not (i) initiate or solicit,
directly or indirectly, any inquiries or the making of any proposal with respect
to a purchase of all or any significant portion of the Purchased Assets (other
than in the ordinary course of business) (an "Acquisition Transaction"), or (ii)
engage in any negotiations concerning, or provide to any other person any
information or data relating to the Seller for the purposes of or have any
discussions with any person relating to, or otherwise cooperate in any way with,
or assist or participate in, facilitate or encourage any effort or attempt by
any other person to seek or effect, an Acquisition Transaction.

        4.5 Public Announcements. Without the prior written consent of the other
party hereto, neither party shall make any press release, public announcement or
other disclosure to third parties including customers (other than disclosures to
lenders and professional advisors who agree to keep such information
confidential) with respect to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement,
except as required by law, or pursuant to any securities laws or regulations.

        4.6 Future Business. From the date hereof through the Closing, the
Purchaser will continue to sell inventory to the Seller in its ordinary course
and will continue to extend open credit to the Seller.

                                    ARTICLE 5
                                     CLOSING

         5.1 Closing. Unless this Agreement is first terminated as provided in
Section 5.4, and subject to the satisfaction or waiver of all conditions to the
consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, the closing of the
transactions contemplated hereby (the "Closing") shall take place at the offices
of Wachtel & Masyr, LLP, 110 East 59th Street, New York, New York 10022 on the
twenty first (21) day following the date that notice of the sale contemplated
herein is sent to the shareholders of the Seller, pursuant to Section 603(b)(1)
of the California General

                                                                             A-7


Corporation  Law;  provided  however,  that the  parties may agree to extend the
Closing for up to thirty (30) days.

        5.2 Conditions to the Purchaser's Obligations. The obligation of the
Purchaser to effect the Closing shall be subject, at its option, to the
satisfaction or waiver of each of the following conditions at or prior to the
Closing:

            5.2.1 Representations, Warranties and Compliance with Covenants.
Each representation and warranty of the Seller contained in this Agreement and
in any Schedule shall be true and correct when made, and shall be true and
correct in all material respects on and as of the Closing Date with the same
effect as though such representation and warranty had been made on and as of the
Closing Date. Each of the covenants and agreements herein on the part of the
Seller to be complied with or performed on or before the Closing Date shall have
been complied with and performed in all material respects. The Purchaser shall
have received a certificate, dated the Closing Date, of the Seller to the
foregoing effect.

            5.2.2 Bill of Sale. The Seller shall have executed and delivered to
the Purchaser a Bill of Sale in form and substance attached hereto as Exhibit B.

            5.2.3 Certificates. The Seller shall have delivered to the Purchaser
certificates of the appropriate governmental authorities, dated as of a date not
more than thirty (30) days prior to the Closing Date, attesting to the existence
and good standing of the Seller in the State of California.

            5.2.4 Litigation. No investigation, suit, action, or other
proceeding shall be threatened or pending before any court or governmental
agency that seeks the restraint, prohibition, damages, or other relief in
connection with this Agreement or the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement.

        5.3 Conditions to Obligations of the Seller. The obligation of the
Seller to effect the Closing shall be subject, at its option, to the
satisfaction or waiver of each of the following conditions at or prior to the
Closing:

            5.3.1 Accuracy of Representations and Warranties and Compliance with
Covenants. Each representation and warranty of the Purchaser contained in this
Agreement shall be true and correct when made, and shall be true and correct in
all material respects on and as of the Closing Date with the same effect as
though such representation and warranty had been made on and as of the Closing
Date. Each of the covenants and agreements herein on the part of the Purchaser
to be complied with or performed on or before the Closing Date shall have been
fully complied with and performed in all material respects. The Seller shall
have received a certificate, dated the Closing Date, of the Purchaser to the
foregoing effect.

            5.3.2 Certificates. The Purchaser shall have delivered to the Seller
a certificate of the appropriate governmental authorities, dated as of a date
not more than thirty (30) days prior to the Closing Date, attesting to the
existence and good standing of the Purchaser in the state of its incorporation.

                                                                             A-8


            5.3.3 Consents and Approvals. All material authorizations, consents,
approvals, waivers and releases necessary for the Seller to consummate the
transactions contemplated hereby shall have been obtained, including, without
limitation, the obtaining of shareholder and director approvals pursuant to the
California General Corporation Law and the Seller shall have complied with
Section 14(c) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

            5.3.4 Approval, Litigation. No investigation, suit, action, or other
proceeding shall be threatened or pending before any court or governmental
agency that seeks the restraint, prohibition, damages, or other relief in
connection with this Agreement or the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement.

            5.3.5 Purchase Price. The Purchaser shall have delivered the
Purchase Price to the Seller and the Escrow Agent.

            5.3.6 Assumption of Liabilities. The Purchaser shall have delivered
an Assumption of Liabilities to the Seller, in substantially the form attached
hereto as Exhibit C.

        5.4 Termination.

            5.4.1 This Agreement may be terminated and abandoned at any time
prior to the Closing:

                  5.4.1.1 By the written mutual consent of the Purchaser and the
                          Seller;

                  5.4.1.2 By the Purchaser on the Closing Date if any of the
                          conditions set forth in Section 5.2 shall not have
                          been fulfilled or waiver on or prior to the Closing
                          Date; and

                  5.4.1.3 By the Seller on the Closing Date if any of the
                          conditions set forth in Section 5.3 shall not have
                          been fulfilled or waived on or prior to the Closing
                          Date.

        5.5 Rights on Termination.

            5.5.1 If this Agreement is terminated pursuant to Section 5.4
hereof, all further obligations of the parties under or pursuant to this
Agreement shall, subject to Section 7.12 herein, terminate without further
liability of either party to the other, except that (i) the Purchaser's
obligations contained in Section 4.3 of this Agreement, (ii) the representations
of the parties contained in Section 7.10 and (iii) the provisions of Section
7.11, shall all survive any such termination.

            5.5.2 In the event that either party hereto terminates this
Agreement for a reason other than as set forth in Section 5.4 herein, or refuses
to or is unable to close the transaction contemplated herein other than as is
permitted hereunder (such party being referred to herein as the "Non-

                                                                             A-9


Closing  Party"),  and such  inability  to close is not the  fault of the  other
party,  the Non-Closing  Party shall pay a break-up fee to the other party in an
amount equal to One Hundred Thousand ($100,000) Dollars in cash.

        5.6 Management.

            5.6.1 If this Agreement is not terminated pursuant to Section 5.4
herein, the Purchaser shall, beginning November 1, 2003, act as the manager for
the fulfillment of orders from the Seller's customers. In connection therewith,
the Purchaser shall manufacture or otherwise obtain all finished goods required
by the Seller's customers and package such items for shipment to the Seller's
customers in accordance with each purchase order. In order to facilitate such
fulfillment obligations, the Seller shall, prior to October 31, 2003, deliver
all its finished goods and certain of its equipment and other fixed assets used
in connection with the operation of the Business, to a pre-designated warehouse
(the "Facility") of the Purchaser.

            5.6.2 As compensation for the Purchaser's services under this
management arrangement, the Purchaser shall be entitled to a fee (the "Fee")
equal to seven and one-half (7.5%) percent of the "Net Sales" of all products
sold to the Seller's customers. For purposes of this Section 5.6, "Net Sales"
shall mean the gross invoice price of each product less all (i) commissions
payable in connection with the sale of such products and (ii) rebates given by
the Seller to its customers in the ordinary course of Seller's business. The Fee
shall be payable on a monthly basis within thirty (30) days after the end of the
following month in which payment was received by the Seller for such product.

            5.6.3 In connection with the services to be provided under this
management arrangement by the Purchaser, (a) the Seller agrees to: (i) maintain
adequate facilities to process orders and invoices; and (ii) deliver to the
Purchaser in a timely manner all customer orders and (b) the Purchaser (i)
agrees to timely fulfill and ship all customer orders and (ii) shall be
responsible for all payments with respect to the transport of inventory from the
Facility to the customers.

            5.6.4 Notwithstanding anything contained herein to the contrary, the
Seller has the right to reject any customer orders if the Seller, in its sole
discretion, deems the profit margins on such purchase orders to be inadequate.

            5.6.5 The obligations of each of the parties under this Section 5.6
shall survive until the earlier of the Closing or the termination of this
Agreement.

            5.6.6 Upon the termination of this Agreement, in addition to all
rights and remedies under this Agreement, the Purchaser shall be required to
fulfill all existing customer orders sent by the Seller and shall immediately
return all unsold inventory of the Seller to the Seller.

                                                                            A-10


                                    ARTICLE 6
                                 INDEMNIFICATION

         6.1      Purchaser's Losses.

            6.1.1 The Seller shall indemnify and hold harmless the Purchaser,
its directors, officers, employees, representatives, agents, and attorneys
("Purchaser Indemnified Parties") from, against and in respect of any and all
Purchaser's Losses (as defined below) suffered, sustained, incurred or required
to be paid by any of them by reason of (i) any representation or warranty made
by the Seller in or pursuant to this Agreement being untrue or incorrect in any
material respect; or (ii) any failure by the Seller to observe or perform its
covenants and agreements set forth in this Agreement or any other agreement or
document executed by the Seller in connection with the transactions contemplated
hereby; except in any instance to the extent the Purchaser's Losses results from
a Purchaser Indemnified Party's own negligence or willful misconduct.

            6.1.2 "Purchaser's Losses" shall mean all damages, including,
without limitation, subject to Section 6.2.3 amounts paid in settlement with the
Seller's consent, which consent may not be unreasonably withheld, losses,
obligations, liabilities, liens, deficiencies, costs (including, without
limitation, reasonable attorneys' fees), taxes, penalties, fines, interest,
monetary sanctions and expenses, including, without limitation, reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs incurred to comply with injunctions and other court
and agency orders, and other costs and expenses incident to any suit, action,
investigation, claim or proceeding or to establish or enforce a Purchaser
Indemnified Party's right to indemnification hereunder. The Seller shall not
have any obligation under Section 6.1 to indemnify the Purchaser Indemnified
Parties with respect to (i) Purchaser's Losses until the aggregate combined
total of all such Purchaser's Losses incurred by the Purchaser Indemnified
Parties exceeds $25,000, whereupon the Purchaser Indemnified Parties shall be
entitled to indemnification with respect to the full amount of Purchaser's
Losses determined without regard to such limitation, and (ii) aggregate
Purchaser's Losses in excess of the amount of the Purchase Price actually paid
to the Seller.

        6.2 Seller's Losses.

            6.2.1 The Purchaser shall indemnify and hold harmless the Seller and
its officers, directors, employees, representatives, agents, and attorneys
("Seller Indemnified Parties") from, against and in respect of any and all
Seller's Losses (as defined below) suffered, sustained, incurred or required to
be paid by any of them, by reason of (i) any representation or warranty made by
the Purchaser in or pursuant to this Agreement being untrue or incorrect in any
material respect, or (ii) any failure by the Purchaser to observe or perform its
covenants and agreements set forth in this Agreement or any other agreement or
document executed by it in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby
including a failure to pay an Assumed Liability, except in any instance to the
extent the Seller's Losses results from a Seller Indemnified Party's own
negligence or willful misconduct.

            6.2.2 "Seller's Losses" shall mean all damages, including, without
limitation, subject to Section 6.2.3 amounts paid in settlement with the
Purchaser's consent, which consent
                                                                            A-11


may not be  unreasonably  withheld,  losses,  obligations,  liabilities,  liens,
deficiencies, costs (including, without limitation, reasonable attorneys' fees),
taxes, penalties, fines, interest,  monetary sanctions and expenses,  including,
without limitation, reasonable attorneys' fees and costs incurred to comply with
injunctions  and other court and agency  orders,  and other  costs and  expenses
incident to any suit, action, investigation, claim or proceeding or to establish
or enforce a Seller Indemnified Party's right to indemnification  hereunder. The
Purchaser  shall not have any  obligation  under  Section 6.2 to  indemnify  the
Seller  Indemnified  Parties with respect to Seller's Losses until the aggregate
combined total of all such Seller's  Losses  incurred by the Seller  Indemnified
Parties  exceeds  $25,000,  whereupon  the Seller  Indemnified  Parties shall be
entitled to  indemnification  with respect to the full amount of Seller's Losses
determined  without  regard to such  limitation,  provided,  however,  that this
limitation  shall not apply to a failure to pay  Purchase  Price or a failure to
pay an Assumed Liability.

            6.2.3 Claims Procedure. Whenever a Purchaser's Loss or Seller's Loss
subject to the indemnity provisions in this Article VI shall arise (a "Claim"),
the party entitled to indemnity (the "Indemnified Party") shall promptly notify
the party obligated to provide indemnity (the "Indemnifying Party") of such
Claim and, when known, the facts constituting the basis of such Claim, provided,
however, that in the event of a claim resulting from or in connection with any
Claim by a third party, the Indemnified Party shall use its diligent efforts to
give notice no later than ten (10) days prior to the time any response to the
asserted Claim is required. In the event of a Claim resulting from or in
connection with a Claim by a third party, the Indemnifying Party may, at its
sole cost and expense, assume the defense thereof. If an Indemnifying Party
assumes the defense of the Claim, the Indemnifying Party shall be entitled to
select counsel and take all steps necessary in the defense thereof and shall
have the right to effect a settlement of the Claim. The Indemnified Party shall
have the right, but not the obligation, to participate at its own expense in the
defense thereof by counsel of its own choice. In the event that the Indemnifying
Party fails to timely defend, contest or otherwise protect against any such
Claim, the Indemnified Party shall have the right to defend, contest or
otherwise protect against the same and may make any compromise or settlement
thereof and recover from the Indemnifying Party the entire cost thereof,
including, without limitation, reasonable attorneys' fees, disbursements and all
amounts paid as a result of such Claim or compromise or settlement thereof.

                                    ARTICLE 7
                                  MISCELLANEOUS

        7.1 Further Assurances. If, at any time after the Closing, either party
shall reasonably consider or be advised that any further assignments,
conveyances, certificates, filings, instruments or documents or any other things
are necessary or desirable to vest, perfect or confirm in the Purchaser title to
the Purchased Assets or to consummate any of the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement, the other party shall, upon request, promptly execute and
deliver all such assignments, certificates, filings, instruments and documents
and do all things reasonably necessary and proper to vest, perfect or confirm
title in the Purchaser and to otherwise carry out the purposes of this
Agreement.

                                                                            A-12


        7.2 Entire Agreement. This Agreement (including the exhibits and
schedules hereto) constitutes the entire agreement and supersedes all prior
agreements and understandings, both written and oral, between the parties hereto
with respect to the subject matter hereof, and no party shall be liable or bound
to the other in any manner by any representations or warranties not set forth
herein. This Agreement has been jointly prepared by the parties hereto and the
terms hereof shall not be construed in favor of or against any party on account
of its participation in such preparation.

        7.3 Successors and Assigns. The terms and conditions of this Agreement
shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the parties hereto and their
respective successors and permitted assigns. The Purchaser has the right to
assign its rights under this Agreement provided, that in the event it assigns
such rights, Spray Products Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation, hereby
unconditionally guarantees the performance of each and every obligation of its
successor as the Purchaser under this Agreement and the Escrow Agreement.

        7.4 Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in one or more
counterparts, each of which shall for all purposes be deemed to be an original
and all of which shall constitute the same instrument.

        7.5 Headings. The headings of the articles and sections of this
Agreement are inserted for convenience only and shall not be deemed to
constitute part of this Agreement or to affect the construction hereof.

        7.6 Modification and Waiver. Any of the terms or conditions of this
Agreement may be waived in writing at any time by the party which is entitled to
the benefits thereof, and this Agreement may be modified or amended by a written
instrument executed by all parties hereto. No supplement, modification, or
amendment of this Agreement shall be binding unless executed in writing by all
of the parties hereto. No waiver of any of the provisions of this Agreement
shall be deemed or shall constitute a waiver of any other provision hereof
(whether or not similar) nor shall such waiver constitute a continuing waiver.

        7.7 Schedules and Exhibits. All exhibits and schedules annexed hereto
are expressly made a part of this Agreement as though fully set forth herein and
all references to this Agreement herein or in any such exhibits or schedules
shall refer to and include all such exhibits and schedules.

        7.8 Notices. Any notice, request, instruction, document or other
communication to be given hereunder by any party hereto to any other party
hereto shall be in writing and validly given if (i) delivered personally, (ii)
sent by telecopy, (iii) delivered by overnight express, or (iv) sent by
registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, as follows:

                                                                            A-13



         If to the Purchaser, to:

                  Spray Products Corporation
                  1323 Conshohocken Road
                  Plymouth Meeting, PA  19462
                  Attn: Burt Bastian
                  Facsimile:  (610) 277-4390

         with a copy to:

                  Eckell, Sparks, Levy, Auerbach, Monte, Rainer & Sloane, P.C.
                  P.O. Box 319
                  Media, PA  19063
                  Attn:  Joseph L. Monte, Jr., Esq.
                  Facsimile:  (610) 565-1596

         If to the Seller:

                  PerfectData Corporation
                  110 West Easy Street
                  Simi Valley, California 93065
                  Attn:  Harris A. Shapiro, Chairman
                  Facsimile:  (805) 522-5788

         with a copy to:

                  Wachtel & Masyr, LLP
                  110 East 59th Street
                  New York, New York 10022
                  Attn:  Robert W. Berend, Esq.
                  Facsimile:  (212) 371-0320

or at such other address for a party as shall be specified by like notice. Any
notice which is delivered personally, or sent by telecopy or overnight express
in the manner provided herein shall be deemed to have been duly given to the
party to whom it is directed upon actual receipt by such party. Any notice which
is addressed and mailed in the manner herein provided shall be conclusively
presumed to have been given to the party to whom it is addressed at the close of
business, local time of the recipient, on the third day after the day it is so
placed in the mail.

        7.9 Governing Law. This agreement shall be construed, enforced, and
governed by the internal laws of the State of California without regard to its
choice of law principles. Each of the parties hereto hereby irrevocably and
unconditionally submits to the exclusive jurisdiction of any court of the State
of California (collectively, the "Courts") for purposes of any suit, action or
other proceeding arising out of this Agreement (and agrees not to commence any
action, suit or proceedings relating hereto except in such Courts). Each of the
parties hereto hereby irrevocably and unconditionally waives any objection to
the laying of venue of any action, suit or proceeding

                                                                            A-14


arising out of this  Agreement,  which is brought by or against it in the Courts
and hereby  further  irrevocably  and  unconditionally  waives and agrees not to
plead or  claim in any such  Court  that  any such  action,  suit or  proceeding
brought in any such Court has been brought in an inconvenient forum.

        7.10 Survival. The representations and warranties of the Purchaser and
Seller included or provided for herein, or in other instruments or agreements
delivered or to be delivered at or prior to the Closing in connection herewith,
shall survive for a period of one (1) year following the Closing Date. The
obligations of the Seller pursuant to Article 7 shall survive until the
expiration of the Covenant Period.

        7.11 Brokers. The Purchaser, on the one hand, and the Seller, on the
other, each represent to the other that it has not used a broker or finder in
connection with the transactions contemplated by this Agreement and each shall
hold the other harmless from any such claim.

        7.12 Expenses. The Purchaser, on the one hand, and the Seller, on the
other, shall each pay its own costs and expenses incurred by it, including, but
not limited, to the fees of their respective counsel in negotiating and
preparing this Agreement and in closing and carrying out the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event that
the (a) the Purchaser breaches its obligations to purchase the Purchased Assets
other than pursuant to Section 5.4 herein, the Purchaser shall reimburse the
Seller for all out of pocket expenses incurred by the Seller (including
reasonable attorneys fees) in connection with this Agreement; or (b) the Seller
enters into a letter of intent or purchase agreement in violation of Section 4.4
herein, the Seller shall reimburse the Purchaser for all out of pocket expenses
incurred by the Purchaser (including reasonable attorneys fees) in connection
with this Agreement.

                                                                            A-15




         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Agreement as the
date first set forth above.

                                       PURCHASER:
                                       Spray Products Corporation


                                       By:  /s/ Bart Bastian
                                       Name:  Bart Bastian
                                       Title:  President



                                       SELLER:
                                       PerfectData Corporation


                                       By: /s/ Harris A. Shaprio
                                       Name: Harris A. Shapiro
                                       Title: Chairman of the Board and Chief
                                               Executive Officer



                                                                           A-16









                                                                     Appendix B
                                 FIRST AMENDMENT
                                       TO
                            ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT


         This First Amendment (the "Amendment"), dated as of the 26 day of
February, 2004, to the Asset Purchase Agreement ("the "Original Agreement"),
dated as of October 3, 2003, between PerfectData Corporation, a California
corporation, and Spray Products Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation.


                               W I T N E S S E T H

         WHEREAS, the parties hereto entered into the Original Agreement whereby
Seller agreed to sell, and Purchaser agreed to purchase, substantially all the
assets of Seller; and

         WHEREAS, the parties desire to amend the Original Agreement as provided
for herein;

         NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual representations,
warranties, covenants and agreement set forth herein, the parties agree as
follows:

1. The second sentence of Section 1.5 is hereby amended by the addition of the
following:

                           "and as provided in Section 4.7 hereof."

2. The following shall be inserted as Section 4.7:

                           "4.7 Insurance. Purchaser agrees to maintain product
                           liability insurance covering not only all products
                           manufactured or shipped by it post-closing, but also
                           including all products manufactured or shipped by the
                           Purchaser prior to the Closing Date, including those
                           during the management period pursuant to Section 5.6
                           hereof."

3. Section 5.6.3(a) is hereby amended to add the following:

                           "(iii) be responsible for all freight and shipping
                           charges incurred by the Buyer in connection with the
                           transport of inventory from the Facility to the
                           customers."

4. Section 5.6.3 (b)(ii) is hereby deleted in its entirety.

5. Except as specifically modified herein, the Original Agreement shall not
be modified and shall remain in full force and effect.
                                                                             B-1


6. All capitalized terms not specifically defined herein shall have the
meaning ascribed to them in the Original Agreement.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Amendment as of the
date first set forth above.

                                        PURCHASER:
                                        Spray Products Corporation


                                        By:   /s/Bart Bastian
                                            ------------------------------
                                        Name:  Bart Bastian
                                        Title:  President


                                        SELLER:
                                        PerfectData Corporation


                                        By: /s/Harris A. Shapiro
                                        Name: Harris A. Shapiro
                                        Title:  Chairman of the Board and Chief
                                                Executive Officer

                                                                             B-2



                                                                     Appendix C

              CALIFORNIA GENERAL CORPORATION LAW SECTIONS 1300-1312
1300.

         (a) If the approval of the outstanding shares (Section 152) of a
corporation is required for a reorganization under subdivisions (a) and (b) or
subdivision (e) or (f) of Section 1201, each shareholder of the corporation
entitled to vote on the transaction and each shareholder of a subsidiary
corporation in a short-form merger may, by complying with this chapter, require
the corporation in which the shareholder holds shares to purchase for cash at
their fair market value the shares owned by the shareholder which are dissenting
shares as defined in subdivision (b). The fair market value shall be determined
as of the day before the first announcement of the terms of the proposed
reorganization or short-form merger, excluding any appreciation or depreciation
in consequence of the proposed action, but adjusted for any stock split, reverse
stock split, or share dividend which becomes effective thereafter.

         (b) As used in this chapter, "dissenting shares" means shares which
come within all of the following descriptions:

             (1) Which were not immediately prior to the reorganization or
short-form merger either (A) listed on any national securities exchange
certified by the Commissioner of Corporations under subdivision (o) of Section
25100 or (B) listed on the National Market System of the NASDAQ Stock Market,
and the notice of meeting of shareholders to act upon the reorganization
summarizes this section and Sections 1301, 1302, 1303 and 1304; provided,
however, that this provision does not apply to any shares with respect to which
there exists any restriction on transfer imposed by the corporation or by any
law or regulation; and provided, further, that this provision does not apply to
any class of shares described in subparagraph (A) or (B) if demands for payment
are filed with respect to 5 percent or more of the outstanding shares of that
class.

             (2) Which were outstanding on the date for the determination of
shareholders entitled to vote on the reorganization and (A) were not voted in
favor of the reorganization or, (B) if described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of
paragraph (1) (without regard to the provisos in that paragraph), were voted
against the reorganization, or which were held of record on the effective date
of a short-form merger; provided, however, that subparagraph (A) rather than
subparagraph (B) of this paragraph applies in any case where the approval
required by Section 1201 is sought by written consent rather than at a meeting.

             (3) Which the dissenting shareholder has demanded that the
corporation purchase at their fair market value, in accordance with Section
1301.

              (4) Which the dissenting shareholder has submitted for
endorsement, in accordance with Section 1302.

         (c) As used in this chapter, "dissenting shareholder" means the
recordholder of dissenting shares and includes a transferee of record.

                                                                             C-1

1301.

         (a) If, in the case of a reorganization, any shareholders of a
corporation have a right under Section 1300, subject to compliance with
paragraphs (3) and (4) of subdivision (b) thereof, to require the corporation to
purchase their shares for cash, such corporation shall mail to each such
shareholder a notice of the approval of the reorganization by its outstanding
shares (Section 152) within 10 days after the date of such approval, accompanied
by a copy of Sections 1300, 1302, 1303, 1304 and this section, a statement of
the price determined by the corporation to represent the fair market value of
the dissenting shares, and a brief description of the procedure to be followed
if the shareholder desires to exercise the shareholder's right under such
sections. The statement of price constitutes an offer by the corporation to
purchase at the price stated any dissenting shares as defined in subdivision (b)
of Section 1300, unless they lose their status as dissenting shares under
Section 1309.

         (b) Any shareholder who has a right to require the corporation to
purchase the shareholder's shares for cash under Section 1300, subject to
compliance with paragraphs (3) and (4) of subdivision D-1 (b) thereof, and who
desires the corporation to purchase such shares shall make written demand upon
the corporation for the purchase of such shares and payment to the shareholder
in cash of their fair market value. The demand is not effective for any purpose
unless it is received by the corporation or any transfer agent thereof. (1) in
the case of shares described in clause (i) or (ii) of paragraph (1) of
subdivision (b) of Section 1300 (without regard to the provisos in that
paragraph), not later than the date of the shareholders' meeting to vote upon
the reorganization, or (2) in any other case within 30 days after the date on
which the notice of the approval by the outstanding shares pursuant to
subdivision (a) or the notice pursuant to subdivision (i) of Section 1110 was
mailed to the shareholder.

         (c) The demand shall state the number and class of the shares held of
record by the shareholder which the shareholder demands that the corporation
purchase and shall contain a statement of what such shareholder claims to be the
fair market value of those shares as of the day before the announcement of the
proposed reorganization or short-form merger. The statement of fair market value
constitutes an offer by the shareholder to sell the shares at such price.

1302.

         Within 30 days after the date on which notice of the approval by the
outstanding shares or the notice pursuant to subdivision (i) of Section 1110 was
mailed to the shareholder, the shareholder shall submit to the corporation at
its principal office or at the office of any transfer agent thereof,

         (a) if the shares are certificated securities, the shareholder's
certificates representing any shares which the shareholder demands that the
corporation purchase, to be stamped or endorsed with a statement that the shares
are dissenting shares or to be exchanged for certificates of appropriate
denomination so stamped or endorsed or


                                                                             C-2


         (b) if the shares are uncertificated securities, written notice of the
number of shares which the shareholder demands that the corporation purchase.
Upon subsequent transfers of the dissenting shares on the books of the
corporation, the new certificates, initial transaction statement, and other
written statements issued therefor shall bear a like statement, together with
the name of the original dissenting holder of the shares.

1303.

         (a) If the corporation and the shareholder agree that the shares are
dissenting shares and agree upon the price of the shares, the dissenting
shareholder is entitled to the agreed price with interest thereon at the legal
rate on judgments from the date of the agreement. Any agreements fixing the fair
market value of any dissenting shares as between the corporation and the holders
thereof shall be filed with the secretary of the corporation.

         (b) Subject to the provisions of Section 1306, payment of the fair
market value of dissenting shares shall be made within 30 days after the amount
thereof has been agreed or within 30 days after any statutory or contractual
conditions to the reorganization are satisfied, whichever is later, and in the
case of certificated securities, subject to surrender of the certificates
therefor, unless provided otherwise by agreement.

1304.

         (a) If the corporation denies that the shares are dissenting shares, or
the corporation and the shareholder fail to agree upon the fair market value of
the shares, then the shareholder demanding purchase of such shares as dissenting
shares or any interested corporation, within six months after the date on which
notice of the approval by the outstanding shares (Section 152) or notice
pursuant to subdivision (i) of Section 1110 was mailed to the shareholder, but
not thereafter, may file a complaint in the superior court of the proper county
praying the court to determine whether the shares are dissenting shares or the
fair market value of the dissenting shares or both or may intervene in any
action pending on such a complaint.

         (b) Two or more dissenting shareholders may join as plaintiffs or be
joined as defendants in any such action and two or more such actions may be
consolidated. (c) On the trial of the action, the court shall determine the
issues. If the status of the shares as dissenting shares is in issue, the court
shall first determine that issue. If the fair market value of the dissenting
shares is in issue, the court shall determine, or shall appoint one or more
impartial appraisers to determine, the fair market value of the shares.

1305.

        (a) If the court appoints an appraiser or appraisers, they shall proceed
forthwith to determine the fair market value per share. Within the time fixed by
the court, the appraisers, or a majority of them, shall make and file a report
in the office of the clerk of the court. Thereupon, on the motion of any party,
the report shall be submitted to the court and considered on such evidence as
the court considers relevant. If the court finds the report reasonable, the
court may confirm it.

                                                                             C-3


         (b) If a majority of the appraisers appointed fail to make and file a
report within 10 days from the date of their appointment or within such further
time as may be allowed by the court or the report is not confirmed by the court,
the court shall determine the fair market value of the dissenting shares.

         (c) Subject to the provisions of Section 1306, judgment shall be
rendered against the corporation for payment of an amount equal to the fair
market value of each dissenting share multiplied by the number of dissenting
shares which any dissenting shareholder who is a party, or who has intervened,
is entitled to require the corporation to purchase, with interest thereon at the
legal rate from the date on which judgment was entered.

         (d) Any such judgment shall be payable forthwith with respect to
uncertificated securities and, with respect to certificated securities, only
upon the endorsement and delivery to the corporation of the certificates for the
shares described in the judgment. Any party may appeal from the judgment.

         (e) The costs of the action, including reasonable compensation to the
appraisers to be fixed by the court, shall be assessed or apportioned as the
court considers equitable, but, if the appraisal exceeds the price offered by
the corporation, the corporation shall pay the costs (including in the
discretion of the court attorneys' fees, fees of expert witnesses and interest
at the legal rate on judgments from the date of compliance with Sections 1300,
1301 and 1302 if the value awarded by the court for the shares is more than 125
percent of the price offered by the corporation under subdivision (a) of Section
1301).

1306.

         To the extent that the provisions of Chapter 5 prevent the payment to
any holders of dissenting shares of their fair market value, they shall become
creditors of the corporation for the amount thereof together with interest at
the legal rate on judgments until the date of payment, but subordinate to all
other creditors in any liquidation proceeding, such debt to be payable when
permissible under the provisions of Chapter 5.

1307.

         Cash dividends declared and paid by the corporation upon the dissenting
shares after the date of approval of the reorganization by the outstanding
shares (Section 152) and prior to payment for the shares by the corporation
shall be credited against the total amount to be paid by the corporation
therefor.

1308.

         Except as expressly limited in this chapter, holders of dissenting
shares continue to have all the rights and privileges incident to their shares,
until the fair market value of their shares is agreed upon or determined. A
dissenting shareholder may not withdraw a demand for payment unless the
corporation consents thereto.

                                                                             C-4



1309.

         Dissenting shares lose their status as dissenting shares and the
holders thereof cease to be dissenting shareholders and cease to be entitled to
require the corporation to purchase their shares upon the happening of any of
the following:

         (a) The corporation abandons the reorganization. Upon abandonment of
the reorganization, the corporation shall pay on demand to any dissenting
shareholder who has initiated proceedings in good faith under this chapter all
necessary expenses incurred in such proceedings and reasonable attorneys' fees.

         (b) The shares are transferred prior to their submission for
endorsement in accordance with Section 1302 or are surrendered for conversion
into shares of another class in accordance with the articles.

         (c) The dissenting shareholder and the corporation do not agree upon
the status of the shares as dissenting shares or upon the purchase price of the
shares, and neither files a complaint or intervenes in a pending action as
provided in Section 1304, within six months after the date on which notice of
the approval by the outstanding shares or notice pursuant to subdivision (i) of
Section 1110 was mailed to the shareholder.

         (d) The dissenting shareholder, with the consent of the corporation,
withdraws the shareholder's demand for purchase of the dissenting shares.

1310.

         If litigation is instituted to test the sufficiency or regularity of
the votes of the shareholders in authorizing a reorganization, any proceedings
under Sections 1304 and 1305 shall be suspended until final determination of
such litigation.

1311.

         This chapter, except Section 1312, does not apply to classes of shares
whose terms and provisions specifically set forth the amount to be paid in
respect to such shares in the event of a reorganization or merger.

1312.

         (a) No shareholder of a corporation who has a right under this chapter
to demand payment of cash for the shares held by the shareholder shall have any
right at law or in equity to attack the validity of the reorganization or
short-form merger, or to have the reorganization or short-form merger set aside
or rescinded, except in an action to test whether the number of shares required
to authorize or approve the reorganization have been legally voted in favor
thereof; but any holder of shares of a class whose terms and provisions
specifically set forth the amount to be paid in respect to them in the event of
a reorganization or short-form merger is entitled to payment in accordance with
those terms and provisions or, if the principal terms of the

                                                                             C-5


reorganization  are approved  pursuant to  subdivision  (b) of Section  1202, is
entitled to payment in accordance  with the terms and provisions of the approved
reorganization.

         (b) If one of the parties to a reorganization or short-form merger is
directly or indirectly controlled by, or under common control with, another
party to the reorganization or short-form merger, subdivision (a) shall not
apply to any shareholder of such party who has not demanded payment of cash for
such shareholder's shares pursuant to this chapter; but if the shareholder
institutes any action to attack the validity of the reorganization or short-form
merger or to have the reorganization or short-form merger set aside or
rescinded, the shareholder shall not thereafter have any right to demand payment
of cash for the shareholder's shares pursuant to this chapter. The court in any
action attacking the validity of the reorganization or short-form merger or to
have the reorganization or short-form merger set aside or rescinded shall not
restrain or enjoin the consummation of the transaction except upon 10 days'
prior notice to the corporation and upon a determination by the court that
clearly no other remedy will adequately protect the complaining shareholder or
the class of shareholders of which such shareholder is a member.

         (c) If one of the parties to a reorganization or short-form merger is
directly or indirectly controlled by, or under common control with, another
party to the reorganization or short-form merger, in any action to attack the
validity of the reorganization or short-form merger or to have the
reorganization or short-form merger set aside or rescinded, (1) a party to a
reorganization or short-form merger which controls another party to the
reorganization or short-form merger shall have the burden of proving that the
transaction is just and reasonable as to the shareholders of the controlled
party, and (2) a person who controls two or more parties to a reorganization
shall have the burden of proving that the transaction is just and reasonable as
to the shareholders of any party so controlled.


                                                                             C-6




                                                                      Appendix D








                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                              Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         (With Independent Registered Accounting Firms' Reports Thereon)













                                                                             D-1



            REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM


PerfectData Corporation
Simi Valley, California

We have audited the  accompanying  balance  sheet as of March 31, 2004,  and the
related  statements of operations,  shareholders'  equity and cash flows for the
year then  ended.  These  financial  statements  are the  responsibility  of the
Company's  management.  Our  responsibility  is to  express  an opinion on these
financial statements based on our audit.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
test basis,  evidence  supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial
statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant  estimates  made by  management,  as well as evaluating  the overall
financial  statement  presentation.   We  believe  that  our  audit  provides  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects,  the financial position of PerfectData  Corporation as of
March 31,  2004,  and the results of its  operations  and its cash flows for the
year then ended in conformity with accounting  principles  generally accepted in
the United States of America.






SINGER LEWAK GREENBAUM & GOLDSTEIN LLP

Los Angeles, California
May 14, 2004


                                                                             D-2




             Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

The Board of Directors and Shareholders
PerfectData Corporation:

We have audited the accompanying statements of operations, shareholders' equity,
and cash flows of PerfectData Corporation (the Company) for the year ended March
31, 2003.  These financial  statements are the  responsibility  of the Company's
management.  Our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion on these  financial
statements based on our audits.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
test basis,  evidence  supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial
statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant  estimates  made by  management,  as well as evaluating  the overall
financial  statement  presentation.   We  believe  that  our  audit  provides  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material  respects,  the results of operations and cash flows of PerfectData
Corporation  for the year ended March 31,  2003 in  conformity  with  accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Los Angeles, California
May 9, 2003, except for the
restatement for discontinued
operations as described in note 2
to the 2003 financial statements,
which is as of June 25, 2004.


                                                                             D-3




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                                  Balance Sheet
                                 March 31, 2004
                  (Amounts in thousands, except share amounts)

                                     Assets

                                                                                  

Current assets:
   Cash and cash equivalents                                                           $    1,903
   Prepaid expenses and other current assets                                                   30
   Current assets of discontinued operations, net of allowance of $3                          220
                                                                                      -------------------------

               Total current assets                                                         2,153

Property and equipment, at cost, net                                                            -
                                                                                      -------------------------

Total assets                                                                           $    2,153
                                                                                      =========================

                                   Liabilities

Current liabilities:
   Accounts Payable                                                                    $      126
   Accrued compensation                                                                        35
   Other accrued expenses                                                                      77
   Current liabilities of discontinued operations                                             255
                                                                                      -------------------------

               Total current liabilities                                                      493
                                                                                      -------------------------

Commitments and contingencies (note 8)

Shareholders' equity:
   Preferred stock.  Authorized 2,000,000 shares; none issued                                   -
   Common stock, no par value.  Authorized 10,000,000 shares;
        issued and outstanding 6,209,530                                                   11,258
   Accumulated deficit                                                                    (9,598)
                                                                                      -------------------------

               Total shareholders' equity                                                   1,660
                                                                                      -------------------------

Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                                              $   2,153
                                                                                      =========================
See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                                                             D-4




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                            Statements of Operations
                       Years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003
              (Amounts in thousands, except per share information)

                                                                                        


                                                                               2004                     2003
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------


Selling, general, and administrative expenses                             $        933        $         668
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------


               Loss from operations                                               (933)               (668)
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------

Other income:

    Interest, net                                                         -                               -

    Other, net                                                                      17                   37
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------


               Loss from continuing operations                                    (916)               (631)

               Income (loss) from discontinued operations                          359                 (11)
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------

               Net income (loss)                                           $      (557)       $       (642)
                                                                          ================    =========================

Net loss per common share:
   Basic and diluted:
               Loss from continuing operations                             $     (0.15)       $      (0.10)

               Income from discontinued operations                                0.06                    -
                                                                          ----------------    -------------------------

                                                                           $     (0.09)       $      (0.10)
                                                                          ================    =========================

Weighted average shares outstanding:

    Basic and diluted                                                            6,193                6,159



See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                                                             D-5




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                       Statements of Shareholders' Equity
                                 (notes 6 and 7)
                       Years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003

                             (Amounts in thousands)


                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                   Net
                                                         Common Stock                  Accumulated              shareholders'
                                                 Shares              Amount              deficit                   equity
                                            ----------------     --------------    ------------------        ------------------

Balance at March 31, 2002                         6,159             $ 11,206          $   (8,399)               $   2,807


    Net loss                                         -                    -                 (642)                   (642)
                                            ----------------     --------------    ------------------        ------------------


Balance at March 31, 2003                         6,159               11,206              (9,041)                   2,165


    Stock Compensation                               50                   52                   -                       52

    Net loss                                          -                    -                (557)                   (557)
                                            ----------------     --------------    ------------------        ------------------


Balance at March 31, 2004                         6,209             $ 11,258          $   (9,598)               $   1,660
                                            ================     ==============    ==================        ==================




See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                                                             D-6



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                            Statements of Cash Flows
                       Years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003
                             (Amounts in thousands)


                                                                                                

                                                                                       2004               2003
                                                                                   --------------    ----------------

Cash flows from continuing operating activities:
    Net loss                                                                       $        (916)      $        (631)
    Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used
        in operating activities:

            Depreciation and amortization                                                      6                   20

            Stock issued for services                                                         52                    -

            (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses and other assets                          32                  (7)

            Increase in accounts payable                                                      54                (106)

            Increase (decrease) in accrued expenses                                           29                 (18)
                                                                                   --------------    ----------------


              Net cash used in continuing operating activities                             (743)                (742)

              Net cash provided by discontinued operating activities                         473                  157
                                                                                   --------------    ----------------


              Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents                                     (270)               (585)


Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                                             2,173                2,758

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                                            $      1,903           $    2,173
                                                                                   ==============    ================




See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                                                             D-7



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003


(1)      Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

         (a)      Description of Business

                  PerfectData  Corporation  (the  Company)  assembles  and sells
                  computer and office equipment care and maintenance products.

         (b)      Cash and Cash Equivalents

                  The  Company   considers   all  highly   liquid  money  market
                  instruments with an original  maturity of three months or less
                  to be cash  equivalents.  At March 31,  2004,  the Company had
                  cash and cash equivalents of $1,903,000.

         (c)      Inventories

                  Prior to the APA  entered  into with Spray,  inventories  were
                  stated  at the  lower  of  cost or  market  and  consisted  of
                  finished  goods.  Cost  was  determined  using  the  first-in,
                  first-out method.

                  The  Company  transferred  all  inventory  on hand to Spray on
                  October 31, 2003, pursuant to the APA.

(d)      Financial Instruments

                  The  carrying  amounts  related to cash and cash  equivalents,
                  accounts  receivable,  and accounts  payable  approximate fair
                  value due to their relatively short maturity.

(e)      Plant and Equipment

                  Plant and equipment are stated at cost.

                  Depreciation  on plant and equipment is  calculated  using the
                  straight-line  method over the  estimated  useful lives of the
                  assets.  Leasehold  improvements  are amortized  straight line
                  over the shorter of the lease term or estimated useful life of
                  the asset. The estimated useful lives are as follows:

                        Machinery and equipment            3 to 5 years
                        Furniture and fixtures             3 to 5 years
                        Leasehold improvements             Life of lease
                                                                     (continued)

                                      D-8
                                                                          


                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003


(f)      Revenue Recognition

                  The Company  recognizes  revenue when products are shipped and
                  the  customer  takes  ownership  and  assumes  risk  of  loss,
                  collection of the relevant  receivable is probable,  pervasive
                  evidence  of an  arrangement  exists,  and the sales  price is
                  fixed or determinable.

(g)      Loss per Common Share

                  Basic  and  diluted  loss  per  common  share  is based on the
                  weighted average number of shares  outstanding  during each of
                  the respective  periods.  Diluted  earnings per share includes
                  the  dilutive  impact  of stock  options,  warrants,  or other
                  equity instruments. During the years presented herein, because
                  net losses were  incurred,  the impact from such common  stock
                  equivalents was  antidilutive;  accordingly,  the common stock
                  equivalents were excluded from the calculation.

                  The following were excluded from the calculation:

                                       March 31,                March 31,
                  Options               2004                      2003

                  1985 Plan             10,000                     11,500
                  2000 Plan            183,500                    185,000
                  1999 Options              -                       5,000
                  Warrants              20,000                     20,000


(h)      Income Taxes

                  Income taxes are  accounted  for under the asset and liability
                  method. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for
                  the  future  tax  consequences   attributable  to  differences
                  between the financial  statement  carrying amounts of existing
                  assets  and  liabilities  and their  respective  tax bases and
                  operating  loss and tax  credit  carryforwards.  Deferred  tax
                  assets and  liabilities  are measured  using enacted tax rates
                  expected  to apply to  taxable  income  in the  years in which
                  those  temporary  differences  are expected to be recovered or
                  settled.  The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of
                  a change in tax rates is  recognized  in income in the  period
                  that  includes  the  enactment  date.  The   realizability  of
                  deferred  tax  assets is  assessed  throughout  the year and a
                  valuation allowance is established accordingly.
                                                                     (continued)

                                                                             D-9



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003


(i)      Use of Estimates

                  The   preparation   of  the  financial   statements   requires
                  management  of the Company to make a number of  estimates  and
                  assumptions  relating  to the  reported  amount of assets  and
                  liabilities  and  the  disclosure  of  contingent  assets  and
                  liabilities  at the date of the financial  statements  and the
                  reported  amounts of revenues and expenses  during the period.
                  Significant  items subject to such  estimates and  assumptions
                  include  the  allowance  for  doubtful   accounts,   inventory
                  valuation, deferred income tax asset valuation allowances, and
                  the estimated  future  operating cash flows from the Company's
                  long-lived  assets.   Considerable   management   judgment  is
                  necessary to estimate  future  operating  cash flows as future
                  cash flows are impacted by competitive  and other factors that
                  are generally out of management's control. Accordingly, actual
                  results could vary significantly from management's estimates.

(j)      Stock-Based Compensation

                  The  Company  applies  the  intrinsic-value-based   method  of
                  accounting  prescribed  by Accounting  Principles  Board (APB)
                  Opinion No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees,  and
                  related interpretations  including FASB Interpretation No. 44,
                  Accounting   for   Certain   Transactions    involving   Stock
                  Compensation, and Interpretation of APB Opinion No. 25, issued
                  in March 2000, to account for its  fixed-plan  stock  options.
                  Under this  method,  compensation  expense is  recorded on the
                  date  of  grant  only  if  the  current  market  price  of the
                  underlying  stock exceeded the exercise  price.  SFAS No. 123,
                  Accounting   for   Stock-Based    Compensation,    established
                  accounting    and    disclosure     requirements    using    a
                  fair-value-based method of accounting for stock-based employee
                  compensation  plans.  As allowed by SFAS No. 123,  the Company
                  has  elected to  continue  to apply the  intrinsic-value-based
                  method of accounting  described above and has adopted only the
                  disclosure requirements of SFAS No. 123.

                  The Company is adopting the disclosure  provisions of SFAS No.
                  148, Accounting for Stock-Based  Compensation - Transition and
                  Disclosure.  Due to the  reduction  of the  exercise  price of
                  fixed stock options  through the  cancellation of stock option
                  awards and the granting of replacement awards, per FIN No. 44,
                  Accounting   for   Certain   Transactions    involving   Stock
                  Compensation,  the Company has adopted variable accounting for
                  the replacement  awards,  per FIN No. 28, Accounting for Stock
                  Appreciation  Rights and Other  Variable Stock Option or Award
                  Plans.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-10




                            PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

                  The Company  applies APB Opinion No. 25 in accounting  for its
                  employees  and director  stock option  plans.  Had the Company
                  determined  compensation  cost  based on the fair value at the
                  grant date for its stock  options  under SFAS No. 123 and SFAS
                  No. 148, the Company's  net loss would have been  increased to
                  the pro forma amounts indicated below. The fair value of these
                  options   was   estimated   at  the  date  of  grant  using  a
                  Black-Scholes   option-pricing  model,  assuming  a  risk-free
                  interest  rate  of  4.57%  -  6.26%,   a  ten-year  term,  50%
                  volatility, and $0 expected dividend rate.

                  (000's, except per share amounts)

                                                                                 

                                                                          2004             2003

                  Net income, as reported                              $     (557)    $     (642)
                  Deduct total stock-based employee compensation
                     expense determined under fair-value-based
                     method for all awards, net of tax                      (  27)            (4)
                                    Pro forma net income               $     (584)    $     (646)

                  Basic and diluted net loss per common share:
                      As reported                                      $    (0.09)    $    (0.10)
                      Pro forma                                        $    (0.09)    $    (0.10)



(k)      Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and
                  Long-Lived Assets To Be Disposed Of

                  SFAS No. 144  Accounting  for the  Impairment  or  Disposal of
                  Long-Live  Assets  provides  a  single  accounting  model  for
                  long-lived assets to be disposed of. SFAS No. 144 also changes
                  the  criteria  for  classifying  an asset as held for sale and
                  broadens  the  scope  of  businesses  to be  disposed  of that
                  qualify for reporting as  discontinued  operations and changes
                  the  timing  of  recognizing  losses on such  operations.  The
                  Company  adopted SFAS No. 144 on January 1, 2002. The adoption
                  of SFAS  No.  144  did  not  affect  the  Company's  financial
                  statements.

                  In accordance with SFAS No. 144,  long-lived  assets,  such as
                  property,  plant,  and  equipment,  and purchased  intangibles
                  subject to amortization,  are reviewed for impairment whenever
                  events or changes in circumstances  indicate that the carrying
                  amount of an asset may not be recoverable.  Recoverability  of
                  assets to be held and used is measured by a comparison  of the
                  carrying amount of an asset to estimated  undiscounted  future
                  cash flows
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-11


                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                       Statements of Shareholders' Equity
                                 (notes 6 and 7)
                       Years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003

                  expected  to be  generated  by the  asset.  If the
                  carrying amount of an asset exceeds its estimated  future cash
                  flows,  an  impairment  charge is  recognized by the amount by
                  which the carrying  amount of the asset exceeds the fair value
                  of the asset.  Assets to be  disposed  of would be  separately
                  presented  in the balance  sheet and  reported at the lower of
                  the carrying  amount or fair value less costs to sell, and are
                  no  longer  depreciated.  The  assets  and  liabilities  of  a
                  disposed group  classified as held for sale would be presented
                  separately in the appropriate asset and liability  sections of
                  the balance sheet.

                  Prior to the adoption of SFAS No. 144,  the Company  accounted
                  for  long-lived  assets  in  accordance  with  SFAS  No.  121,
                  Accounting  for  Impairment  of  Long-Lived   Assets  and  for
                  Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed Of.

(l)      Recently Issued Accounting Standards

                  In June 2002,  the FASB issued SFAS No.  146,  Accounting  for
                  Costs  Associated with Exit or Disposal  Activities.  SFAS No.
                  146  addresses  financial  accounting  and reporting for costs
                  associated  with exit or  disposal  activities  and  nullifies
                  Emerging  Issues  Task  Force  (EITF)  Issue  94-3,  Liability
                  Recognition  for Certain  Employee  Termination  Benefits  and
                  Other  Costs  to  Exit an  Activity.  The  provisions  of this
                  Statement are effective for exit or disposal  activities  that
                  are initiated after December 31, 2002, with early  application
                  encouraged.  The  adoption of SFAS No. 146 is not  expected to
                  have a material effect on the Company's financial statements.

(2)      Discontinued Operations

         On  October  3,  2003,  the  Company  entered  into an  Asset  Purchase
         Agreement  (the  "APA")  with  Spray  Products  Corporation  ("Spray"),
         pursuant  to which  the  Company  agreed  to sell to Spray  (or a Spray
         affiliate) substantially all of the operating assets of the Company for
         a price  equal to the sum of the  value of the  inventory,  collectible
         accounts  receivable  and $100,000,  less the amount of trade  payables
         which are being assumed by Spray.

         Since November 1, 2003, Spray has,  pursuant to the APA, been acting as
         a manager for the  fulfillment of orders from the Company's  customers.
         As compensation for Spray's services,  Spray is receiving a fee of 7
         1/2% of net sales.

         Because the Company's  largest  customer had threatened to seek another
         supplier because of a supplier's offer of lower prices,  and because of
         the long delay in closing the transaction,  thereby causing uncertainty
         for customers and Spray, the Company and Spray have agreed in principle
         to the  following  revisions  to the APA: (1)  effective  June 1, 2004,
         Spray  will  assume  full  responsibility  for  all  of  the  Company's
         customers in order to prevent possible losses of customer business; (2)
         the aforementioned  payment of $100,000 will be reduced to $80,000; (3)
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-12


                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                       Statements of Shareholders' Equity
                                 (notes 6 and 7)
                       Years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003

         based on the  amounts  of the items  constituting  the  purchase  price
         described  above and as  modified  in (2) as if the closing was held on
         May 31, 2004, the Company will advise Spray of this estimated  purchase
         price and Spray  will  promptly  advance  to the  Company  an amount in
         excess of what the Company owes Spray for product purchased from Spray;
         and (4) the Company may put the assets to Spray for the purchase  price
         on the earlier of (a) September  30, 2004 or (b) the Company  receiving
         shareholder consent to the sale of Spray.

         The  Board  of  Directors,   after   consultation  with  certain  major
         shareholders,  had elected in June 2003, to sell the operating business
         assets of the Company  because,  despite  efforts by the Company during
         the prior fiscal years which had increased sales and reduced  expenses,
         the  Company  continues  to operate  at a loss,  thereby  diluting  the
         Company's  cash,  which is its major asset.  The Board concluded that a
         sale or liquidation  of the operating  assets was in the best interests
         of the Company and its  shareholders  even if no  acquisition or merger
         was effected.

         The Company will seek  shareholders'  approval,  by consents in lieu of
         holding a meeting, to permit the sale of its operating assets to Spray.
         At  such  time as the  Company  has  obtained  formal  approval  of its
         shareholders  to permit  the sale to Spray,  the  Company  will have no
         operations and will thereafter receive no revenues until an acquisition
         or merger is effected.

         The Board of Directors of the Company does not intend to liquidate  the
         Company, but instead,  with the Company having cash or cash equivalents
         currently in excess of  $1,500,000,  the Board  intends to continue its
         search for a suitable merger or acquisition candidate.  Even though the
         Company will have no operations,  the Company  believes its status as a
         publicly-traded  company is valuable  and  therefore  makes it a viable
         merger  candidate.  During the past three fiscal years, the Company had
         been  seeking  acquisitions  which have not been related to its current
         business.  The  Board  was  of  the  opinion  that  profitability  on a
         continuous  basis would not be achieved  absent an acquisition of a new
         business or businesses and/or new products.  However, the Board can not
         determine when any such  acquisition  will be  consummated,  if at all.
         During  recent  years,  three  potential   acquisitions  were  actively
         pursued;  however, all terminated for different reasons and the Company
         incurred expenses in connection therewith.

         No adjustments  have been made to the financial  statements as a result
         of these uncertainties.

         The Company  accounted for the sale as a disposal group under Statement
         of  Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS")  No.  144.  Accordingly,
         amounts in the financial  statements  and related notes for all periods
         presented have been reclassified to reflect SFAS No. 144 treatment.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-13




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

The carrying amount of the assets and liabilities of the discontinued operations
at March 31, 2004 were as follows:

         (amounts in thousands except per share information)

                                                                                        

                                                                       March 31,
                                                                         2004
         Assets:
            Accounts receivable     net of
               an allowance for doubtful
               accounts of $ 3                                         $   192
            Inventory                                                       28
            Property and equipment, net                                     -
         Total Assets                                                      220

         Liabilities:
           Accounts Payable                                            $   255

         Operating results of the discontinued operations are as follows:

         (amounts in thousands except per share information)
                                                                       March 31,              March 31,
                                                                         2004                   2003

                  Net revenue                                           $2,680                 $2,005

                  Income (loss) from discontinued operations               359                   (11)

                  Income (loss) per share from
                      discontinued operations                           $ 0.06                $     -




(3)      Concentration of Credit Risk

         Financial  instruments  which  potentially  subject  the  Company  to a
         concentration  of  credit  risk  principally   consist  of  cash,  cash
         equivalents, and accounts receivable.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-14



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         As of March 31, 2004, the Company had approximately  $1,903,000 of cash
         equivalents in two financial institutions, which exposes the Company to
         concentration of credit risk. The Company had approximately  $1,896,000
         invested  in highly  liquid  money  market  instruments,  which are not
         federally insured.  The remaining $7,000 was deposited at a bank, which
         is federally insured up to $100,000.

         The Company  sells its  principal  products to a number of customers in
         the retail  industry.  During the years  ended March 31, 2004 and 2003,
         two customers accounted for more than 10% of net sales. These customers
         each  accounted  for 71% and  47%,  and 13% and 23% in 2004  and  2003,
         respectively.  As of March 31, 2004 and 2003, approximately 78% and 38%
         of  recorded  accounts  receivable  were  from  two  wholesale/discount
         merchants.  For the years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003,  sales made to
         these  customers  amounted to $1,911,000  and $337,000 and $942,000 and
         $457,000,  respectively.  To reduce credit risk,  the Company  performs
         ongoing credit evaluations of its customers'  financial  conditions but
         does not generally require  collateral.  New customers  requiring large
         credit accounts are required to provide letters of credit.

(4)      Inventories

         Pursuant to the APA, the Company  transferred  its inventory on hand at
         October 31, 2003 to Spray.  Pursuant to this agreement,  Spray will pay
         the  Company  for  the  inventory  at  the  time  of the  close  of the
         transaction.  The Company  reclassified its inventory,  with a net book
         value of $28,000, to assets of discontinued operations.

(5)      Property and Equipment

         Property and equipment at March 31, 2004 consist of:

                  Machinery and equipment            $        296
                  Furniture and fixtures                        7
                                                              303

                  Less accumulated depreciation
                      and amortization                      (303)
                                                     $         -

(6)      Income Taxes

         A  reconciliation  of the  federal  statutory  income  tax  rate to the
         effective  income  tax rate on loss from  continuing  operations  is as
         follows:
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-15



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003



                                                                    March 31
                                                                2004        2003
         Federal statutory rate                                  34%         34%
               Increase (reductions) in taxes due to:
           State income taxes (net of federal benefit)            3            6
           Change in valuation allowance                        (18)          46
           Dividends-received deduction                           1          (3)
           California net operating loss limitation               -          (3)
           Expiration of federal net operating loss             (16)        (74)
           Expiration of state net operating loss                (4)          -
           Expiration of general business credit                  -          (3)
           Other                                                  -          (3)

                                                                  -%          -%


         The  tax  effects  of  temporary   differences  that  give  rise  to  a
         significant  portion of the  deferred  tax assets at March 31, 2004 are
         summarized as follows (in thousands):

                  Deferred tax assets (liabilities):
                           Net operating losses                        $1,978
                           Inventories                                     13
                           Accrued expenses                                43
                           Business tax credit carryforwards               12
                           Other                                           16
                                                                        2,062

                           Less valuation allowance                     2,002
                                                                       $    -

         At  March  31,  2004,   the  Company  had  net  operating   loss  (NOL)
         carryforwards  of  approximately  $5,453,000 and $2,205,000 for federal
         income tax purposes and California  income tax purposes,  respectively,
         expiring in varying amounts through 2023. The NOL carryforwards,  which
         are available to offset  future  profits of the Company and are subject
         to  limitations  should a  "change  in  ownership"  as  defined  in the
         Internal  Revenue  Code  occur,  will  begin to  expire  in 2009 if not
         utilized.  Additionally,  the Company has general  business  tax credit
         carryforwards  of  approximately  $12,000 which will begin to expire in
         2006.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-16





                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         Realization  of the future tax  benefits of the NOL  carryforwards  and
         other  deferred  tax assets is dependent  on the  Company's  ability to
         generate  future  taxable  income  within  the  periods  in which  they
         benefit.  In  assessing  the  likelihood  of  utilization  of  existing
         deferred tax assets,  management  considered the historical  results of
         continuing  operations  over  the  last  three  years  and the  current
         economic  environment  in which the Company  operates.  Management  has
         determined  that future  taxable income of the Company will more likely
         than not be  insufficient  to realize the  recorded  net  deferred  tax
         assets of  $2,062,000  and has  recorded a valuation  allowance  of
         $2,062.00 During the year ended March 31, 2004, the Company increased
         the valuation allowance in deferred tax assets by $118,000.

(7)      Shareholder's Equity

         On January 20, 2000, the Company  entered into certain  agreements with
         Millennium  Capital  Corporation  (MCC) and JDK Associates  Inc. (JDK).
         Pursuant to the  agreements,  the Company sold 1,333,333  shares of its
         common stock to MCC, JDK and certain  other buyers and issued a warrant
         to purchase 1,800,000 shares of the Company's common stock at $2.75 per
         share, for aggregate  consideration of $3,000,000.  In addition,  under
         the agreements,  MCC and JDK will provide financial advisory assistance
         to the Company in searching  for and closing  future  acquisitions  and
         financings  for which they will  receive an  advisory  fee of 5% of the
         estimated purchase price for a future acquisition which they introduced
         to the Company or for  additional  capital  raised in support of future
         acquisitions. The term of this consulting agreement is five years.

         Because  of the  significance  of these  agreements,  the  Company  was
         required to obtain, and they did obtain on March 31, 2000,  shareholder
         approval.   Immediately  thereafter,   the  warrant  holders  exercised
         warrants to purchase 1,780,000 shares of common stock, resulting in the
         issuance  on March  31,  2000 of  1,515,406  shares  of  common  stock.
         Accordingly,  on March 31,  2000,  2,848,739  shares were issued for an
         aggregate consideration of $3,000,000.

         For financial reporting  purposes,  the Company has accounted for these
         transactions  as an increase in common stock for  $3,000,000,  recorded
         net of the  applicable  costs.  The future 5%  consulting  fees will be
         accounted for if and when occurred.

         The  remaining  warrants to purchase  20,000  shares of common stock at
         $2.75 per share are outstanding at March 31, 2004.

         On July 31, 2003,  the Company  issued  50,000  shares of the Company's
         common stock to the Chairman of the Audit Committee as compensation for
         his  services  over the past three  years.  The  Company  has  recorded
         compensation expense of $51,500 for the shares.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-17



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         The  articles of  incorporation  authorize a class of  preferred  stock
         issuable in classes and series with such  designations,  voting rights,
         redemption  provisions,  dividend  rates,  liquidation  and  conversion
         rights,  and other  preferences and limitations as may be determined by
         the board of directors. No preferred stock was outstanding at March 31,
         2004.

(8)      Stock Option and Bonus Plans

         1985 Stock Option Plan

         During  November 1985,  the Company  adopted the 1985 Stock Option Plan
         (the "1985 Plan")to grant incentive and  nonqualified  stock options to
         officers  and key  employees  of the Company for the  purchase of up to
         500,000  shares of the  Company's  common  stock.  Under the 1985 Plan,
         options  were  granted at prices  equal to or greater  than fair market
         value at date of grant. The shares, subject to various limitations, are
         exercisable over terms not to exceed ten years. No options were granted
         during the three years ended March 31, 2004. A total of 377,750 options
         were  exercised  through  March 31,  2004,  with  10,000  options  left
         outstanding.  The  1985  Plan has  expired;  therefore,  no  additional
         options can be issued under its terms.

         On March 31, 2003,  an employee of the Company was  terminated  who was
         previously  granted an option to purchase  1,500 shares of common stock
         at  $2.0625  per  share.  As the  terminated  employee  had 90  days to
         exercise,  the option was  outstanding as of March 31, 2003. The option
         subsequently expired unexercised.

         Activity under the 1985 Plan is summarized as follows:

                                                                       Weighted
                                                    Number of          average
                                                    shares             exercise
                                                                         price

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2002      11,500           $   1.3017
         Options canceled                                -                    -

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2003      11,500               1.3017
         Options canceled                           (1,500)              2.0625

         Option outstanding at March 31, 2004       10,000           $   1.1877
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-18

                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         The weighted  average  remaining  contractual  life of the  outstanding
         options was approximately 1.3 years at March 31, 2004.

         1999 Options

         On April 28, 1999,  the board of directors  authorized  the granting of
         options or warrants to purchase up to an aggregate of 100,000 shares of
         common stock to directors,  employees,  or consultants.  The options or
         warrants were to be sold to the grantee at $0.05 per share,  to have an
         exercise price of $1.56 per share,  and to have a three-year  term from
         the respective  date of grant. A total of 24,000 options were exercised
         through  March 31,  2004.  Activity  for these  options and warrants is
         summarized as follows:

                                                                    Weighted
                                                                average exercise
                                                       Shares         price

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2002          13,000       $  1.56
         Canceled                                       (8,000)         1.56

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2003           5,000          1.56
         Canceled                                       (5,000)         1.56

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2004                -      $     -

         2000 Stock Option Plan

         On May 22, 2000,  the  Company's  board of directors  adopted the Stock
         Option Plan of 2000 of PerfectData  Corporation (the "2000 Plan") which
         provides for the granting of options to directors, officers, employees,
         and  consultants  of the  Company.  The  Company's  board of  directors
         reserved  1,000,000  shares of common  stock  under the 2000  Plan.  On
         September 7, 2000,  the Company's  board of directors  amended the 2000
         Plan to reserve an  additional  1,000,000  shares of common  stock.  On
         October 19, 2000,  the  shareholders  of the Company  approved the 2000
         Plan and ratified options previously granted.

         Options  granted  under the 2000 Plan  shall be at a price no less than
         the fair  market  value of the common  stock on the date of grant or in
         the case of  nonqualified  stock options at a price equal to or greater
         than 85% of the fair market value on the date of grant. Options granted
         under the 2000 Plan are  exercisable  at various times as determined by
         the board of directors or its designee.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-19


                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         On October  31,  2001,  the  Company  granted  options to  purchase  an
         aggregate  of  10,000  shares  of  common  stock at $3.43  per share to
         various employees.  The option price was equal to the fair market value
         at the time of  grant.  All of the  options  described  were to  become
         exercisable in four substantially equal  installments,  commencing with
         the first anniversary of the respective date of grant.

         On June 15,  2002,  the Company  granted an option to  purchase  10,000
         shares  of  common  stock  at  $1.60  per  share  to each  of the  five
         directors.  The option price was equal to 120% of the fair market value
         at the time of  grant.  All of the  options  described  were to  become
         exercisable in three substantially equal installments,  commencing with
         the first anniversary of the respective date of grant.

         On  September  17, 2002,  the board of  directors  canceled the options
         granted to each  director  pursuant to the 2000 Plan, on March 31, 2000
         to purchase  25,000  shares of common  stock at $18.50 per share and on
         September  7, 2000,  to purchase  25,000  shares of the common stock at
         $4.63 per  share.  None of the  options to  purchase  an  aggregate  of
         250,000 shares were exercised.

         On September 26, 2002, the Company granted an option to purchase 25,000
         shares  of  common  stock  at  $1.00  per  share  to each  of the  five
         directors.  The fair market value of the stock on the date  shareholder
         approval was obtained was below the exercise price.  All of the options
         described  were to  become  exercisable  in three  substantially  equal
         installments,  commencing with the first  anniversary of the respective
         date of grant.  In  accordance  with FIN 44, the  Company  has  adopted
         variable  accounting  for these  replacement  awards.  No  compensation
         expense has been recognized in the financial results as the fair market
         value has not exceeded the exercise price.

         On March 31, 2003,  an employee of the Company was  terminated  who was
         previously  granted an option to purchase  1,500 shares of common stock
         at $3.43 per share. As the terminated employee had 60 days to exercise,
         the  option  was   outstanding   as  of  March  31,  2003.  The  option
         subsequently expired unexercised.
                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-20



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         Activity under the 2000 Plan is summarized as follows:
                                                                        Weighted
                                                     Number of    average option
                                                        shares           price

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2002         260,000        $    11.25

         Options granted                               175,000              1.17
         Options canceled                             (250,000)            10.97

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2003         185,000              1.29

         Options canceled                               (1,500)            3.43

         Options outstanding at March 31, 2004         183,500        $     1.28

         As of March 31, 2004, options to purchase 62,584 shares of common stock
         are exercisable at a weighted average  exercise price of $1.325.  As of
         March 31, 2004, 1,816,500 shares were available for future grants.

         The following table summarizes in more detail information regarding the
         Company's  stock options  outstanding  under the 2000 Plan at March 31,
         2004:



                                                                   
                                    Weighted Average                            Weighted Average
Exercise        Outstanding         Remaining                Exercisable        Remaining
   Price          Options           Contractual Life         Options            Contractual Life

$1.00             125,000                   7.6                  41,667                   7.6
$1.60              50,000                   8.3                  16,667                   8.3
$3.43               8,500                   8.5                   4,250                   8.5

Total             183,500                   8.4                  62,584                   8.4

                                                                     (continued)
                                                                            D-21



                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                             March 31, 2004 and 2003

         (9) Commitments

         The Company  leases  office space under a six-month  lease that expires
         October 15, 2004. The Company had previously leased a facility under an
         operating  lease which expired June 20, 2003. The Company  continued to
         occupy the facility,  along with a subtenant to whom the Company sublet
         warehouse space, on a month-to-month basis until October 31, 2003.

         Rental expense,  net of sublease  income,  was $50,000 and $100,000 for
         the years ended March 31, 2004 and 2003, respectively.












                                                                            D-22


                Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                      Condition and Results of Operations.

Proposed Sale of Current Business Operations

         As previously reported, on October 3, 2003, the Company entered into an
Asset Purchase Agreement (the "APA") with Spray Products Corporation  ("Spray"),
pursuant  to which the  Company  agreed to sell to Spray (or a Spray  affiliate)
substantially  all of the  operating  assets of the Company for a price equal to
the sum of the  value of the  inventory,  collectible  accounts  receivable  and
$100,000, less the amount of trade payables which are being assumed by Spray.

         Since November 1, 2003, Spray has,  pursuant to the APA, been acting as
a  manager  for the  fulfillment  of orders  from the  Company's  customers.  As
compensation  for Spray's  services,  Spray is  receiving a fee of 7 1/2% of net
sales.  As a result of the management  arrangement  with Spray,  the Company has
moved to a smaller facility and reduced its staff,  thereby reducing its ongoing
overhead expenses.

         Because the Company's  largest  customer had threatened to seek another
supplier because of a supplier's offer of lower prices,  and because of the long
delay in closing the transaction,  thereby causing uncertainty for customers and
Spray, the Company and Spray have agreed in principle to the following revisions
to the APA: (1) effective  June 1, 2004,  Spray will assume full  responsibility
for all of the  Company's  customers  in order to  prevent  possible  losses  of
customer business; (2) the aforementioned payment of $100,000 will be reduced to
$80,000;  (3) based on the amounts of the items  constituting the purchase price
described  above and as  modified  in (2) as if the  closing was held on May 31,
2004, the Company will advise Spray of this  estimated  purchase price and Spray
will  promptly  advance to the  Company an amount in excess of what the  Company
owes Spray for product  purchased  from  Spray;  and (4) the Company may put the
assets to Spray for the purchase  price on the earlier of (a) September 30, 2004
or (b) the Company receiving shareholder consent to the sale of Spray

         The  Board  of  Directors,   after   consultation  with  certain  major
shareholders, had elected in June 2003, to sell the operating business assets of
the Company  because,  despite  efforts by the Company  during the prior  fiscal
years which had increased sales and reduced  expenses,  the Company continues to
operate at a loss,  thereby  diluting  the  Company's  cash,  which is its major
asset.  The Board  concluded that a sale or liquidation of the operating  assets
was in the  best  interests  of the  company  and  its  shareholders  even if no
acquisition or merger (including the then pending transaction with SuperCom) was
effected.

         The Company will seek  shareholders'  approval,  by consents in lieu of
holding a meeting, to permit the sale of its operating assets to Spray.

         As a result of the  transaction,  as modified,  with Spray, the Company
will  have no  operations  and will  thereafter  receive  no  revenues  until an
acquisition  or  merger  is  effected,  as to  which  and when  there  can be no
assurance.

                                                                            D-23



            Efforts to Seek Another Merger or Acquisition Candidates

         As previously  reported,  on July 2, 2003, the Company entered into the
Merger Agreement and related agreements with SuperCom,  an Israeli  corporation,
culminating the negotiations which had begun in April 2003.  SuperCom is engaged
in the research, development and marketing of advanced technologies and products
for  government  secured ID projects and smart card  production  technology.  On
January 20, 2004,  the Company  reported  that the Merger  Agreement and related
agreements had terminated.

         The Board of Directors of the Company does not intend to liquidate  the
Company but instead,  with the Company having cash or cash equivalents currently
in excess of $1,500,000, the Board intends to continue its search for a suitable
merger  or  acquisition  candidate.   Even  though  the  Company  will  have  no
operations,  the Company  believes  its status as a  publicly-traded  company is
valuable and therefore makes it a viable merger candidate. During the past three
fiscal  years,  the Company had been  seeking  acquisitions  which have not been
related to its current business. The Board was of the opinion that profitability
on a  continuous  basis would not be  achieved  absent an  acquisition  of a new
business or businesses and/or new products. However, the Board can not determine
when any such acquisition  will be consummated,  if at all. During recent years,
three  potential  acquisitions   (including  SuperCom)  were  actively  pursued;
however,  all terminated for different reasons and the Company incurred expenses
in connection therewith.

Critical Accounting Policies

         Management  believes  that  the  following   discussion  addresses  the
Company's  most  critical  accounting  policy,  which is most  important  to the
portrayal of the Company's  financial  condition  and results,  and requires the
most difficult,  subjective and complex judgments, often as a result of the need
to make  estimates  about the effect of matters that are  inherently  uncertain.
Prior to November 1, 2003,  the date on which Spray assumed  responsibility  for
fulfillment  of customer  orders,  management  also included a discussion of its
evaluation of inventory as a critical accounting policy on an on-going basis.

Allowance for Doubtful Accounts:

         The Company evaluates the collectibility of its accounts receivable and
provides an  allowance  for  estimated  losses  that may result from  customers'
inability to pay.  The amount of the reserve is  determined  by analyzing  known
uncollectible  accounts,  aged  receivables  and  customers'  credit-worthiness.
Amounts later  determined and specifically  identified to be  uncollectible  are
written off against the allowance.

___________

         The following  discussions  of the Results of Operations  and Liquidity
and Capital  Resources are before the  restatement  of the  Company's  financial
statements for the proposed sale of the current business operations.

                                                                            D-24


                             Results of Operations

         Net sales in fiscal 2004 increased $675,000, or 34%, to $2,680,000 from
net sales of $2,005,000 in fiscal 2003. The increased  sales in fiscal 2004 were
a result of an increase in sales  volume with the Compan's  existing  customers.
Spray's management of the fulfillment of orders from the Company's customers, as
described under the caption  "Proposed Sale of Current  Business  Operations" in
this Item 6, had no effect on the  increased  sales in fiscal 2004.  All the net
sales in fiscal 2004 and 2003 related to discontinued operations.

         Cost of Goods Sold  ("Costs") as a percentage  of net sales was 66% for
fiscal 2004 and 2003, respectively.  Even though the Company incurred additional
costs in fiscal 2004  related to the  interim  management  fee for Spray,  these
costs were offset by the reduction in overhead expenses when the Company reduced
its staff,  as well as the savings in freight  expense  when orders were shipped
directly from Spray to the Company's customers. All the Costs in fiscal 2004 and
2003 related to discontinued operations.

         Selling,  General and Administrative  Expenses  ("Expenses") for fiscal
2004 and 2003 were  $1,477,000  and  $1,358,000,  respectively.  The increase in
Expenses in fiscal 2004 directly  related to costs  associated with the SuperCom
transaction,  as well as severance pay and related taxes paid to employees whose
employment was terminated when the Company  transferred its order fulfillment to
Spray.  These costs were  partially  offset by a reduction in facility  expenses
when the  Company  transferred  its  order  fulfillment  to Spray and moved to a
smaller facility.  An aggregate of $226,000 in Expenses relating to the SuperCom
transaction  were  incurred  in fiscal  2004 and an  aggregate  of  $115,000  in
Expenses  relating to an aborted  transaction  were incurred in fiscal 2003. See
"Terminated  Acquisitions" under Item 1, Part I to this Report. In addition, the
Company recorded  compensation  expense of $51,500 in fiscal 2004 related to the
50,000 shares of the  Company's  Common Stock issued to the then Chairman of the
Audit  Committee for his services as such.  Included in Expenses for fiscal 2004
and 2003 were  components  related to  discontinued  operations  of $544,000 and
$690,000, respectively.

         Other Income from  continuing  operations  for fiscal 2004 and 2003 was
primarily dividend income of $17,000 and $37,000, respectively.

         The decreased net loss in fiscal 2004 directly related to the increased
sales partially offset by the increase in Expenses, as described above.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

         The Company's cash and cash  equivalents  decreased  $270,000 in fiscal
2004. The decrease resulted from cash used in continuing operating activities of
$743,000, partially offset by cash provided by discontinued operating activities
of $473,000.

         The Company had a current ratio of better than 4 to1 at fiscal year end
and no long-term debt.

                                                                            D-25


         As a result of the continuing negative cash flows from operations,  the
Company is dependent on the  proceeds  from its March 2000 private  placement in
order to meet its payable  requirements.  On March 31, 2000,  certain  investors
(including two of the current directors) purchased from the Company an aggregate
of  1,333,333  shares of the  Common  Stock at $2.25  per share or an  aggregate
purchase  price of  $2,999,999.  The net proceeds  approximated  to  $2,895,000.
Because all of such funds were not  required  for  operations,  the funds deemed
excess were invested in a working capital management account with Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated  ("Merrill Lynch"). As reported in Note 3 to
the Financial  Statements in this Report,  as of March 31, 2004, the Company had
approximately  $1,903,000 of cash  equivalents  in two  financial  institutions,
which exposes the Company to a concentration of credit risk. The Company had, as
of that date,  approximately  $1,896,000  invested in highly liquid money market
instruments with Merrill Lynch, which are not federally  insured.  The remaining
$7,000 was deposited at a bank, which is federally insured up to $100,000.

         The Company  believes  that,  as a result of the cash  described in the
preceding  paragraph and assuming  consummation of the proposed sale of business
operations  to Spray,  the  Company's  working  capital is  adequate to fund its
operations  and its  requirements  for the fiscal  year  ending  March 31,  2005
("fiscal  2005").  In the event,  which in the opinion of  management  is deemed
unlikely, that the sale to Spray is not consummated, the Board believes that the
Company  would either  continue to operate the business for a short period while
seeking  another  buyer or, more likely would  liquidate  its  operations  in an
orderly  fashion.  In either event, the Company believes it has adequate working
capital to continue to operate for fiscal 2005 while  seeking a suitable  merger
and acquisition candidate.

At March 31,  2004,  the  Company  had net  operating  loss and general
business  tax credit carry  forwards  for income tax  purposes of  approximately
$5,453,000 and $12,000 respectively,  available to reduce future potential
Federal income taxes.

                                                                            D-26

                             Controls and Procedures

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

         The Company has a CEO and a CFO/CAO,  constituting  all of  management,
and, during the reporting period, six employees to conduct  operations.  The CEO
and CFO/CAO  performed  an  evaluation  of the  effectiveness  of the design and
operation of the Company's  disclosure  controls and  procedures as of March 31,
2004.  Because of its small size and limited  number of  personnel,  the Company
does not  currently  have  elaborate  written  procedures,  nor does  management
believe that such elaborate written procedures are currently necessary to ensure
accurate  reporting  in  the  Company's   periodic  reports.   In  making  their
evaluation,  the CEO and CFO/CAO  consulted with the Company's  outside counsel.
Based  on that  evaluation,  the  two  officers  concluded  that  the  Company's
disclosure controls and procedures were adequate and effective,  as of March 31,
2004 to ensure that material  information  relating to the Company would be made
known to them by others  within the Company,  particularly  during the period in
which this Report was being prepared. Their evaluation was reported to the Audit
Committee in connection with its review of this Report prior to its filing.

Changes in Internal Controls

         There  have  been no  significant  changes  in the  Company's  internal
controls or in other factors that could  significantly  affect internal controls
since the date of their evaluation in the fourth quarter.

                                                                            D-27


                                                                      APPENDIX E


                          AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER


         THIS  AGREEMENT  AND  PLAN  OF  MERGER  dated  as  of  August__,   2004
(hereinafter  referred to as this  "Agreement")  is made and entered into by and
between PerfectData  Corporation,  a California corporation (the "Parent"),  and
PerfectData (Delaware) Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Subsidiary").

                                    RECITALS:

         A. The Parent is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of
the State of California.

         B. The Subsidiary is a corporation organized and existing under the
laws of the State of Delaware and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Parent.

         C. The Parent and the Subsidiary and their respective Boards of
Directors deem it advisable and to the advantage, welfare, and best interests of
the corporations and their respective stockholders to merge the Parent with and
into the Subsidiary pursuant to the provisions of California General Corporation
Law (the "CGCL") and the Delaware General Corporation Law (the "DGCL") upon the
terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.

         NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises, the mutual covenants
herein contained and other good and valuable consideration the receipt and
sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties hereto agree that the
Parent shall be merged into the Subsidiary (the "Merger") upon the terms and
conditions hereinafter set forth.

                                    ARTICLE I

                          PRINCIPAL TERMS OF THE MERGER

         1.1. Merger. On the Effective Date (as defined in Section 4.1 hereof),
the Parent shall be merged into the Subsidiary, the separate existence of the
Parent shall cease and the Subsidiary (following the Merger referred to as the
"Surviving Corporation") shall operate under the name "PerfectData Corporation"
by virtue of, and shall be governed by, the laws of the State of Delaware. The
address of the registered office of the Surviving Corporation in the State of
Delaware will be 2711 Centerville Road, Suite 400, Wilmington, Delaware
19808-1297, County of New Castle. The name of its registered agent at such
address is the Corporation Service Company.

         1.2. Certificate of Incorporation of the Surviving Corporation. The
Certificate of Incorporation of the Surviving Corporation shall be the
Certificate of Incorporation of the

                                                                             E-1


Subsidiary as in effect on the date hereof
without change unless and until amended in accordance with applicable law.

         1.3. Bylaws of the Surviving Corporation. The Bylaws of the Surviving
Corporation shall be the Bylaws of the Subsidiary as in effect on the date
hereof without change unless and until amended or repealed in accordance with
applicable law.

         1.4. Directors and Officers. At the Effective Date of the Merger, the
directors and officers set forth on Exhibit A attached hereto shall become the
directors and officers, respectively, of the Surviving Corporation, each of such
directors and officers to hold office, subject to the applicable provisions of
the Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws of the Surviving Corporation and the
DGCL, until his or her successor is duly elected or appointed and qualified.

                                   ARTICLE II

                       CONVERSION, CERTIFICATES AND PLANS

         2.1. Conversion of Shares. At the Effective Date of the Merger, each of
the following transactions shall be deemed to occur simultaneously:

         (a)      Common Stock. Each share of the Parent's common stock, no par
                  value per share (the "Parent's Common Stock"), issued and
                  outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Date of the
                  Merger shall, by virtue of the Merger and without any action
                  on the part of the holder thereof, be converted into and
                  become one validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable share
                  of the Surviving Corporation's common stock, $0.01 par value
                  per share (the "Surviving Corporation's Common Stock"), except
                  for those shares of the Parent's Common Stock with respect to
                  which the holders thereof duly exercise their dissenters'
                  rights under the CGCL.

          (b)     Options. Each option to acquire shares of the Parent's
                  Common Stock outstanding immediately prior to the Effective
                  Date of the Merger shall, by virtue of the Merger and without
                  any action on the part of the holder thereof, be converted
                  into and become an equivalent option to acquire, upon the same
                  terms and conditions, the number of shares of the Surviving
                  Corporation's Common Stock, which is equal to the number of
                  shares of the Parent's Common Stock that the optionee would
                  have received had the optionee exercised such option in full
                  immediately prior to the Effective Date of the Merger (whether
                  or not such option was then exercisable) and the exercise
                  price per share under each of said options shall be equal to
                  the exercise price per share thereunder immediately prior to
                  the Effective Date of the Merger, unless otherwise provided in
                  the instrument granting such option.

          (c)     Warrants. Each warrant to acquire shares of the Parent's
                  Common Stock outstanding immediately prior to the Effective
                  Date of the Merger shall, by virtue of the Merger and without
                  any action on the part of the holder thereof, be

                                                                             E-2


                  converted into and become a warrant to acquire,  upon the same
                  terms and  conditions,  the number of shares of the  Surviving
                  Corporation's  Common  Stock  which is equal to the  number of
                  shares of the Parent's  Common  Stock that the warrant  holder
                  would have  received  had the warrant  holder  exercised  such
                  warrant in full immediately prior to the Effective Date of the
                  Merger (whether or not such warrant was then  exercisable) and
                  the exercise price per share under each of said warrants shall
                  be  equal  to  the   exercise   price  per  share   thereunder
                  immediately prior to the Effective Date of the Merger,  unless
                  otherwise provided in the instrument granting such warrant.

          (d)     Other Rights. Any other right, by contract or otherwise,
                  to acquire shares of the Parent's Common Stock outstanding
                  immediately prior to the Effective Date of the Merger shall,
                  by virtue of the Merger and without any action on the part of
                  the holder thereof, be converted into and become a right to
                  acquire, upon the same terms and conditions, the number of
                  shares of the Surviving Corporation's Common Stock which is
                  equal to the number of shares of the Parent's Common Stock
                  that the right holder would have received had the right holder
                  exercised such right in full immediately prior to the
                  Effective Date of the Merger (whether or not such right was
                  then exercisable) and the exercise price per share under each
                  of said rights shall be equal to the exercise price per share
                  thereunder immediately prior to the Effective Date of the
                  Merger, unless otherwise provided in the agreement granting
                  such right.

          (e)     Each share of the Subsidiary's Common Stock issued and
                  outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Date of the
                  Merger and held by the Parent shall be canceled without any
                  consideration being issued or paid therefor.

       2.2. Stock Certificates. After the Effective Date of the Merger, each
certificate theretofore representing issued and outstanding shares of the
Parent's Common Stock will thereafter be deemed to represent the same number of
shares of the Surviving Corporation Common Stock. The holders of outstanding
certificates theretofore representing the Parent's Common Stock will not be
required to surrender such certificates to the Parent.

                                   ARTICLE III

         TRANSFER AND CONVEYANCE OF ASSETS AND ASSUMPTION OF LIABILITIES

       3.1. Effects of the Merger. At the Effective Date of the Merger, the
Merger shall have the effects specified in the CGCL, the DGCL and this
Agreement. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, and subject
thereto, at the Effective Date of the Merger, the Surviving Corporation shall
possess all the rights, privileges, powers and franchises, of a public as well
as a private nature, and shall be subject to all the restrictions, disabilities
and duties of each of the parties to this Agreement; the rights, privileges,
powers and franchises of the Parent and the Subsidiary, and all property, real,
personal and mixed, and all debts due to each of them on whatever account, shall
be vested in the Surviving Corporation; and all property, rights, privileges,
powers and franchises, and all and every other interest shall be thereafter the
property

                                                                             E-3


of the  Surviving  Corporation,  as  they  were  of the  respective  constituent
entities,  and the title to any real estate whether by deed or otherwise  vested
in the Parent and the  Subsidiary  or either of them,  shall not revert to be in
any way impaired by reason of the Merger;  but all rights of  creditors  and all
liens upon any property of the parties  hereto,  shall be preserved  unimpaired,
and all debts,  liabilities  and duties of the respective  constituent  entities
shall  thenceforth  attach to the  Surviving  Corporation,  and may be  enforced
against it to the same extent as if said debts,  liabilities and duties had been
incurred or contracted by it.

       3.2. Additional Actions. If, at any time after the Effective Date of the
Merger, the Surviving Corporation shall consider or be advised that any further
assignments or assurances in law or any other acts are necessary or desirable
(a) to vest, perfect or confirm, of record or otherwise, in the Surviving
Corporation, title to and possession of any property or right of the Parent
acquired or to be acquired by reason of, or as a result of, the Merger, or (b)
otherwise to carry out the purposes of this Agreement, the Parent and its proper
officers and directors shall be deemed to have granted to the Surviving
Corporation an irrevocable power of attorney to execute and deliver all such
proper deeds, assignments and assurances in law and to do all acts necessary or
proper to vest, perfect or confirm title to and possession of such property or
rights in the Surviving Corporation and otherwise to carry out the purposes of
this Agreement. The proper officers and directors of the Surviving Corporation
are fully authorized in the name of the Parent or otherwise to take any and all
such action.

                                   ARTICLE IV

               APPROVAL BY SHAREHOLDERS; AMENDMENT; EFFECTIVE DATE

       4.1. Approval. This Agreement and the Merger contemplated hereby are
subject to approval by the requisite vote of shareholders in accordance with the
CGCL and the DGCL. As promptly as practicable after approval of this Agreement
by shareholders in accordance with applicable law, duly authorized officers of
the respective parties shall make and execute Articles of Merger and a
Certificate of Merger and shall cause such documents to be filed with the
Secretary of State of California and the Secretary of State of Delaware,
respectively, in accordance with the laws of the States of California and
Delaware. The effective date (the "Effective Date") of the Merger shall be the
date on which the Merger becomes effective under the laws of California or the
date on which the Merger becomes effective under the laws of Delaware, whichever
occurs later.

       4.2. Amendments. The Board of Directors of the Parent may amend this
Agreement at any time prior to the Effective Date, provided that an amendment
made subsequent to the approval of the Merger by the shareholders of the Parent
shall not (a) alter or change the amount or kind of shares to be received in
exchange for or on conversion of all or any of the shares of the Parent's Common
Stock, (b) alter or change any term of the Certificate of Incorporation of the
Subsidiary, or (c) alter or change any of the terms and conditions of this
Agreement if such alteration or change would adversely affect the holders of the
Parent's Common Stock.

                                                                             E-4


                                    ARTICLE V

                                  MISCELLANEOUS

       5.1. Termination. This Agreement may be terminated and the Merger
abandoned at any time prior to the filing of this Agreement with the Secretary
of State of California and the Secretary of State of Delaware, whether before or
after shareholder approval of this Agreement, by the consent of the Board of
Directors of the Parent and the Subsidiary.

       5.2. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in any number of
counterparts, each of which shall be considered to be an original instrument.

       5.3. Descriptive Headings. The descriptive headings are for convenience
of reference only and shall not control or affect the meaning or construction of
any provision of this Agreement.


       5.4. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be construed in accordance with
the laws of the State of Delaware, except to the extent the laws of the State of
California shall apply to the Merger where mandated by the CGCL.

                                      * * *

       IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned officers of each of the parties to
this Agreement, pursuant to authority duly given by their respective boards of
directors, have caused this Agreement to be duly executed on the date set forth
above.


                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION


                             By:________________________________
                                     Name:
                                     Title:


                             PERFECTDATA (DELAWARE) INC.


                             By:_________________________________
                                     Name:
                                     Title:

                                                                             E-5




                                    EXHIBIT A

               DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS OF THE SURVIVING CORPORATION

Directors

Brian Maizlish
Timothy D. Morgan
Tracie Savage
Harris A. Shapiro
Corey P. Schlossman


Officers

Chairman of the Board      Harris A. Shapiro

Vice President, Finance    Irene J. Marino

Secretary                  Irene J. Marino



                                                                             E-6


                                                                      APPENDIX F


                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

                                       OF

                           PERFECTDATA (DELAWARE) INC.

       The undersigned, a natural person, for the purpose of organizing a
corporation for conducting the business and promoting the purposes hereinafter
stated, under the provisions and subject to the requirements of the laws of the
State of Delaware (particularly Chapter 1, Title 8 of the Delaware Code and the
acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto, and known, identified and
referred to as the "General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware"), hereby
certifies that:

       FIRST: The name of the corporation (hereinafter called the "Corporation")
                     is: PerfectData (Delaware) Inc.

       SECOND: The address of the Corporation's registered office in the State
of Delaware is 2711 Centerville Road, Suite 400, Wilmington, Delaware
19808-1297, County of New Castle. The name of its registered agent at such
address is the Corporation Service Company.

       THIRD: The nature of the business to be conducted and the purposes of the
Corporation are:

       To purchase or otherwise acquire, invest in, own, lease, mortgage,
pledge, sell, assign and transfer or otherwise dispose of, trade and deal in and
with real property and personal property of every kind, class and description
(including, without limitation, goods, wares and merchandise of every kind,
class and description), to manufacture goods, wares and merchandise of every
kind, class and description, both on its own account and for others;

       To make and perform agreements and contracts of every kind and
description; and

       To engage in any lawful act or activity or carry on any business for
which corporations may be organized under the Delaware General Corporation Law
or any successor statute.

       FOURTH: The total number of shares of all classes of stock which the
Corporation shall have authority to issue is 12,000,000 shares, consisting of
10,000,000 shares of common stock, par value $0.01 per share (the "Common
Stock") and 2,000,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $0.01 per share (the
"Preferred Stock").

                                                                             F-1



         A. Common Stock.

                  1.       General. The voting, dividend and liquidation and
                           other rights of the holders of the Common Stock are
                           expressly made subject to and qualified by the rights
                           of the holders of any series of Preferred Stock.

                  2.       Voting Rights. The holders of record of the Common
                           Stock are entitled to one vote per share on all
                           matters to be voted on by the Corporation's
                           stockholders.

                  3.       Dividends. Dividends may be declared and paid on the
                           Common Stock from funds lawfully available therefor
                           if, as and when determined by the Board of Directors
                           in their sole discretion, subject to provisions of
                           law, any provision of this Certificate of
                           Incorporation, as amended from time to time, and
                           subject to the relative rights and preferences of any
                           shares of Preferred Stock authorized, issued and
                           outstanding hereunder.

                  4.       Liquidation. Upon the dissolution, liquidation or
                           winding up of the Corporation, whether voluntary or
                           involuntary, holders of record of the Common Stock
                           will be entitled to receive pro rata all assets of
                           the Corporation available for distribution to its
                           stockholders, subject, however, to the liquidation
                           rights of the holders of Preferred Stock authorized,
                           issued and outstanding hereunder.

       B. Preferred Stock.

       The Preferred Stock may be issued from time to time in one or more
series. The Board of Directors is authorized, subject to any limitations
prescribed by law, to provide for the issuance of shares of Preferred Stock in
series, and by filing a certificate pursuant to the applicable law of the State
of Delaware (such certificate being hereafter referred to as a "Preferred Stock
Designation"), to establish from time to time the number of shares to be
included in each such series, and to fix the designation, powers, preferences
and rights of the shares of each such series and any qualifications, limitations
or restrictions thereof. In the event that at any time the Board of Directors
shall have established and designated one or more series of Preferred Stock
consisting of a number of shares less than all of the authorized number of
shares of Preferred Stock, the remaining authorized shares of Preferred Stock
shall be deemed to be shares of an undesignated series of Preferred Stock unless
and until designated by the Board of Directors as being part of a series
previously established or a new series then being established by the Board of
Directors. Notwithstanding the fixing of the number of shares constituting a
particular series, the Board of Directors may at any time thereafter authorize
an increase or decrease in the number of shares of any such series except as set
forth in the Preferred Stock Designation for such series. In case the number of
shares of any series shall be so decreased, the shares constituting such
decrease shall resume the status of authorized undesignated Preferred Stock
unless and until designated by the Board of Directors as being a part of a
series previously established or a new series then being established by the
Board of Directors.

                                                                             F-2



       FIFTH: The name and mailing address of the sole incorporator is as
follows:

            Name                               Mailing Address

            Allan J. Weiss, Esq.               Wachtel & Masyr, LLP
                                               110 East 59th Street
                                               New York, New York 10022

       SIXTH: The Corporation is to have perpetual existence.

       SEVENTH: For the management of the business and for the conduct of the
affairs of the Corporation, and in further definition and not in limitation of
the powers of the Corporation and of its directors and of its stockholders or
any class thereof, as the case may be, conferred by the State of Delaware, it is
further provided that:

       A. The management of the business and the conduct of the affairs of the
Corporation shall be vested in its board of directors (the "Board of
Directors"). The number of directors which shall constitute the whole Board of
Directors shall be fixed by, or in the manner provided in, the Corporation's
By-Laws (the "By-laws"). The phrase "whole Board" and the phrase "total number
of directors" shall be deemed to have the same meaning, to wit, the total number
of directors which the Corporation would have if there were no vacancies. No
election of directors need be by written ballot.

       B. After the original or other By-Laws of the Corporation have been
adopted, amended or repealed, as the case may be, in accordance with the
provisions of Section 109 of the General Corporation Law of the State of
Delaware, and, after the Corporation has received any payment for any of its
stock, the power to adopt, amend, or repeal the By-Laws of the Corporation may
be exercised by the Board of Directors of the Corporation.

       C. The books of the Corporation may be kept at such place within or
without the State of Delaware as the By-Laws of the Corporation may provide or
as may be designated from time to time by the Board of Directors of the
Corporation.

       EIGHTH: The Corporation shall, to the fullest extent permitted by Section
145 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, as the same may be
amended and supplemented from time to time, indemnify and advance expenses to,
(i) its directors and officers, and (ii) any person who at the request of the
Corporation is or was serving as a director, officer, employee or agent of
another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, from
and against any and all of the expenses, liabilities, or other matters referred
to in or covered by said section as amended or supplemented (or any successor),
provided, however, that except with respect to proceedings to enforce rights to
indemnification, the By-Laws of the Corporation may provide that the Corporation
shall indemnify any director, officer or such person in connection with a
proceeding (or part thereof) initiated by such director, officer or such person
only if such proceeding (or part thereof) was authorized by the board of
directors of the Corporation. The Corporation, by action of its Board of
Directors, may provide indemnification or advance expenses to employees and
agents of the Corporation or other persons only on such

                                                                             F-3


terms and conditions  and to the extent  determined by the board of directors in
its sole and absolute discretion.  The indemnification provided for herein shall
not be deemed  exclusive of any other rights to which those  indemnified  may be
entitled under any By-Law,  agreement,  vote of  stockholders  or  disinterested
directors or otherwise,  both as to action in their official  capacity and as to
action in another capacity while holding such office, and shall continue as to a
person who has ceased to be a director,  officer,  employee,  or agent and shall
inure to the  benefit  of the  heirs,  executors  and  administrators  of such a
person.

       NINTH: A director of the Corporation shall not be personally liable to
the Corporation or its stockholders for the monetary damages for any breach of
fiduciary duty as a director, except for liability (i) for any breach of the
director's duty of loyalty to the Corporation or its stockholders, (ii) for acts
or omissions not in good faith or that involve intentional misconduct or a
knowing violation of law, (iii) under Section 174 of the General Corporation Law
of the State of Delaware, or (iv) for any transaction from which the director
derived an improper personal benefit. If the General Corporation Law of the
State of Delaware is amended after approval by the stockholders of this
Certificate of Incorporation to authorize corporate action further eliminating
or limiting the personal liability of directors, then the liability of a
director shall be eliminated or limited to the fullest extent permitted by the
General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, as so amended. Any repeal or
modification of this Article Ninth shall be prospective and shall not affect the
rights under this Article Ninth in effect at the time of the alleged occurrence
of any act or omission to act giving rise to liability or indemnification.

       TENTH: Whenever a compromise or arrangement is proposed between this
Corporation and its creditors or any class of them and/or between this
Corporation and its stockholders or any class of them, any court of equitable
jurisdiction within the State of Delaware may, on the application in a summary
way of this Corporation or of any creditor or stockholder thereof or on the
application of any receiver or receivers appointed for this Corporation under
the provisions of Section 291 of Title 8 of the Delaware Code or on the
application of trustees in dissolution or of any receiver or receivers appointed
for this Corporation under the provisions of Section 279 of Title 8 of the
Delaware Code, order a meeting of the creditors or class of creditors, and/or of
the stockholders or class of stockholders of this Corporation, as the case may
be, to be summoned in such manner as the said court directs. If a majority in
number representing three-fourths (3/4) in value of the creditors or class of
creditors, and/or of the stockholders or class of stockholders of this
Corporation, as the case may be, agree to any compromise or arrangement and to
any reorganization of this Corporation as consequence of such compromise or
arrangement, the said compromise or arrangement and the said reorganization
shall, if sanctioned by the court to which the said application has been made,
be binding on all the creditors or class of creditors, and/or on all the
stockholders or class of stockholders, of this Corporation, as the case may be,
and also on this Corporation.

       ELEVENTH: From time to time any of the provisions of this Certificate of
Incorporation may be amended, altered or repealed, and other provisions
authorized by the laws of the State of Delaware at the time in force may be
added or inserted in the manner and at the time prescribed by said laws, and all
rights at any time conferred upon the stockholders of the Corporation by this
Certificate of Incorporation are granted subject to the provisions of this
Article.


                                                                             F-4


       I, the undersigned, being the sole incorporator, for the purpose of
forming a Corporation under the laws of the State of Delaware, do make, file and
record this Certificate of Incorporation, to certify that the facts herein
stated are true, and accordingly have hereto set my hand this _____day of August
2004.


                                               /s/ Allan J. Weiss
                                               --------------------------
                                               Allan J. Weiss, Esq.
                                               Sole Incorporator

                                      F-5


                                                                      APPENDIX G


                                    BYLAWS OF

                           PERFECTDATA (DELAWARE) INC.

                                    ARTICLE I

                                     OFFICES


1.1      Registered Office.

         The address of PerfectData (Delaware) Inc.'s (the "Corporation")
registered office in the State of Delaware is 2711 Centerville Road, Suite 400,
Wilmington, Delaware 19808-1297, County of New Castle. The name of its
registered agent at such address is the Corporation Service Company.

1.2      Other Offices.

         The Corporation may also have an office or offices at any other place
or places within or outside the State of Delaware.

                                   ARTICLE II

                     MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS; STOCKHOLDERS'
                           CONSENT IN LIEU OF MEETING

2.1      Annual Meetings.

         The annual meeting of the stockholders for the election of directors,
and for the transaction of such other business as may properly come before the
meeting, shall be held at such place, date and hour as shall be fixed by the
Board of Directors (the "Board") and designated in the notice or waiver of
notice thereof, except that no annual meeting need be held if all actions,
including the election of directors, required by the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware (the "Delaware Statute") to be taken at a stockholders'
annual meeting are taken by written consent in lieu of meeting pursuant to
Section 2.10 of this Article II.

2.2      Special Meetings.

         A special meeting of the stockholders for any purpose or purposes may
be called by the Board, the Chairman, the Chief Executive Officer or the record
holders of at least 10% of the shares entitled to cast votes at such meeting, to
be held at such place, date and hour as shall be designated in the notice or
waiver of notice thereof.

                                                                             G-1



2.3      Notice of Meetings.

         Except as otherwise required by statute, the Certificate of
Incorporation of the Corporation (the "Certificate") or these Bylaws, notice of
each annual or special meeting of the stockholders shall be given to each
stockholder of record entitled to vote at such meeting not less than 10 nor more
than 60 days before the day on which the meeting is to be held, by delivering
written notice thereof to him, her or it personally, or by mailing a copy of
such notice, postage prepaid, directly to him, her or it at his, her or its
address as it appears in the records of the Corporation, or by transmitting such
notice thereof to him, her or it at such address by telegraph, cable or other
telephonic transmission. Every such notice shall state the place, the date and
hour of the meeting, and, in case of a special meeting, the purpose or purposes
for which the meeting is called. Notice of any meeting of stockholders shall not
be required to be given to any stockholder who shall attend such meeting in
person or by proxy, or who shall, in person or by his, her or its attorney
thereunto authorized, waive such notice in writing, either before or after such
meeting. Except as otherwise provided in these Bylaws, neither the business to
be transacted at, nor the purpose of, any meeting of the stockholders need be
specified in any such notice or waiver of notice. Notice of any adjourned
meeting of stockholders shall not be required to be given, except when expressly
required by law.

2.4      Quorum.

         At each meeting of the stockholders, except where otherwise provided by
the Certificate or these Bylaws, the holders of a majority of the issued and
outstanding shares of Common Stock of the Corporation entitled to vote at such
meeting, present in person or represented by proxy, shall constitute a quorum
for the transaction of business. In the absence of a quorum, a majority in
interest of the stockholders present in person or represented by proxy and
entitled to vote, or, in the absence of all the stockholders entitled to vote,
any officer entitled to preside at, or act as secretary of, such meeting, shall
have the power to adjourn the meeting from time to time, until stockholders
holding the requisite amount of stock to constitute a quorum shall be present or
represented. At any such adjourned meeting at which a quorum shall be present,
any business may be transacted which might have been transacted at the meeting
as originally called.

2.5      Place of Meetings.

         Annual meetings or special meetings of stockholders may be held at any
place within or without the State of Delaware as may be selected from time to
time by the Chief Executive Officer or the Board.

2.6      Organization.

         Unless otherwise determined by the Board, at each meeting of the
stockholders, one of the following shall act as chairman of the meeting and
preside thereat, in the following order of precedence:

         (a) the Chairman, if any;
                                                                             G-2


         (b) the Chief Executive Officer;

         (c) any director, officer or stockholder of the Corporation designated
by the Board to act as chairman of such meeting and to preside thereat if the
Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer shall be absent from such meeting; or

         (d) a stockholder of record who shall be chosen chairman of such
meeting by a majority in voting interest of the stockholders present in person
or by proxy and entitled to vote thereat.

         The Secretary or, if he shall be presiding over such meeting in
accordance with the provisions of this Section 2.6 or if he shall be absent from
such meeting, the person (who shall be an Assistant Secretary, if an Assistant
Secretary has been appointed and is present) whom the chairman of such meeting
shall appoint, shall act as secretary of such meeting and keep the minutes
thereof.

2.7      Order of Business.

         The order of business at each meeting of the stockholders shall be
determined by the chairman of such meeting, but such order of business may be
changed by a majority in voting interest of those present in person or by proxy
at such meeting and entitled to vote thereat.

2.8      Voting.

         Except as otherwise provided by law, the Certificate or these Bylaws,
at each meeting of the stockholders, every stockholder of the Corporation shall
be entitled to one vote in person or by proxy for each share of Common Stock of
the Corporation held by him, her or it and registered in his, her or its name on
the books of the Corporation on the date fixed pursuant to Section 6.7 of
Article VI as the record date for the determination of stockholders entitled to
vote at such meeting. Persons holding stock in a fiduciary capacity shall be
entitled to vote the shares so held. A person whose stock is pledged shall be
entitled to vote, unless, in the transfer by the pledgor on the books of the
Corporation, he, she or it has expressly empowered the pledgee to vote thereon,
in which case only the pledgee or his, her or its proxy may represent such stock
and vote thereon. If shares or other securities having voting power stand in the
record of two or more persons, whether fiduciaries, members of a partnership,
joint tenants, tenants in common, tenants by the entirety or otherwise, or if
two or more persons have the same fiduciary relationship respecting the same
shares, unless the Secretary shall be given written notice to the contrary and
furnished with a copy of the instrument or order appointing them or creating the
relationship wherein it is so provided, their acts with respect to voting shall
have the following effect:

         (a) if only one votes, his, her or its act binds all;

         (b) if more than one votes, the act of the majority so voting binds
all; and

         (c) if more than one votes, but the vote is evenly split on any
particular matter, such shares shall be voted in the manner provided by law.

                                                                             G-3


If the  instrument  so filed  shows  that any such  tenancy  is held in  unequal
interests,  a majority or even-split  for the purposes of this Section 2.8 shall
be a majority or even-split in interest. The Corporation shall not vote directly
or indirectly any share of its own capital stock. Any vote of stock may be given
by the  stockholder  entitled  thereto  in  person  or by his,  her or its proxy
appointed by an instrument in writing, subscribed by such stockholder or by his,
her or its attorney  thereunto  authorized,  delivered  to the  secretary of the
meeting; provided,  however, that no proxy shall be voted after three years from
its date, unless said proxy provides for a longer period. At all meetings of the
stockholders,  all matters  (except  where other  provision  is made by law, the
Certificate  or these  Bylaws)  shall be decided  by the vote of a  majority  in
interest of the  stockholders  present in person or by proxy at such meeting and
entitled  to  vote  thereon,  a  quorum  being  present.  Unless  demanded  by a
stockholder  present in person or by proxy at any meeting  and  entitled to vote
thereon,  the vote on any question  need not be by ballot.  Upon a demand by any
such  stockholder  for a vote by ballot upon any  question,  such vote by ballot
shall  be  taken.  On a vote by  ballot,  each  ballot  shall be  signed  by the
stockholder  voting,  or by his, her or its proxy,  if there be such proxy,  and
shall state the number of shares voted.

2.9      Inspection.

         The chairman of the meeting may at any time appoint one or more
inspectors to serve at any meeting of the stockholders. Any inspector may be
removed, and a new inspector or inspectors appointed, by the Board at any time.
Such inspectors shall decide upon the qualifications of voters, accept and count
votes, declare the results of such vote, and subscribe and deliver to the
secretary of the meeting a certificate stating the number of shares of stock
issued and outstanding and entitled to vote thereon and the number of shares
voted for and against the question, respectively. The inspectors need not be
stockholders of the Corporation, and any director or officer of the Corporation
may be an inspector on any question other than a vote for or against his or her
election to any position with the Corporation or on any other matter in which he
or she may be directly interested. Before acting as herein provided, each
inspector shall subscribe an oath faithfully to execute the duties of an
inspector with strict impartiality and according to the best of his or her
ability.

2.10     List of Stockholders.

         It shall be the duty of the Secretary or other officer of the
Corporation who shall have charge of its stock ledger to prepare and make, at
least 10 days before every meeting of the stockholders, a complete list of the
stockholders entitled to vote thereat, arranged in alphabetical order, and
showing the address of each stockholder and the number of shares registered in
the name of each stockholder. Such list shall be open to the examination of any
stockholder, for any purpose germane to any such meeting, during ordinary
business hours, for a period of at least 10 days prior to such meeting, either
at a place within the city where such meeting is to be held, which place shall
be specified in the notice of the meeting or, if not so specified, at the place
where the meeting is to be held. Such list shall also be produced and kept at
the time and place of the meeting during the whole time thereof, and may be
inspected by any stockholder who is present.
                                                                             G-4



1.11     Stockholders' Consent in Lieu of Meeting.

         Any action required by the Delaware Statute to be taken at any annual
or special meeting of the stockholders of the Corporation, or any action which
may be taken at any annual or special meeting of such stockholders, may be taken
without a meeting, without prior notice and without a vote, by a consent in
writing, as permitted by the Delaware Statute.

2.12     Action by Means of Conference Telephone or Similar Communications
Equipment.

         Any one or more of the stockholders may participate in a meeting of the
stockholders by means of conference telephone or similar communications
equipment by which all persons participating in the meeting can hear each other,
and participation in a meeting by such means shall constitute presence in person
at such meeting.

                                   ARTICLE III

                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

3.1      General Powers.

         The business, property and affairs of the Corporation shall be managed
by or under the direction of the Board, which may exercise all such powers of
the Corporation and do all such lawful acts and things as are not by law or by
the Certificate directed or required to be exercised or done by the
stockholders.

3.2      Number and Term of Office.

         The number of directors of the Corporation shall not be less than five
nor more than eight. The number of directors within the range set forth in the
preceding sentence shall be fixed from time to time by the Board. Directors need
not be stockholders. Each director shall hold office until his or her successor
is elected and qualified, or until his or her earlier death or resignation or
removal in the manner hereinafter provided.

3.3      Election of Directors.

         At each meeting of the stockholders for the election of directors at
which a quorum is present, the persons receiving the greatest number of votes,
up to the number of directors to be elected, of the stockholders present in
person or by proxy and entitled to vote thereon shall be the directors;
provided, however, that for purposes of such vote no stockholder shall be
allowed to cumulate his or her votes. Unless an election by ballot shall be
demanded as provided in Section 2.8 of Article II, election of directors may be
conducted in any manner approved at such meeting.

                                                                             G-5



3.4      Resignation, Removal and Vacancies.

         Any director may resign at any time by giving written notice to the
Board, the Chairman, the Chief Executive Officer or the Secretary. Such
resignation shall take effect at the time specified therein or, if the time be
not specified, upon receipt thereof; and unless otherwise specified therein, the
acceptance of such resignation shall not be necessary to make it effective.

         Any director or the entire Board may be removed, with or without cause,
at any time, by vote of the holders of a majority of the shares then entitled to
vote at an election of directors or by written consent of the stockholders
pursuant to Section 2.11 of Article II.

         Vacancies occurring on the Board for any reason may be filled by vote
of the stockholders or by the stockholders' written consent pursuant to Section
2.11 of Article II, or by vote of the Board or by the directors' written consent
pursuant to Section 3.6 of this Article III. If the number of directors then in
office is less than a quorum, such vacancies may be filled by a vote of a
majority of the directors then in office.

3.5      Meetings.

         (a) Annual Meetings. As soon as practicable after each annual election
of directors, the Board shall meet for the purpose of organization and the
transaction of other business, unless it shall have transacted all such business
by written consent pursuant to Section 3.6 of this Article III.

         (b) Other Meetings. Other meetings of the Board shall be held at such
times and at such places as the Board, the Chairman, the Chief Executive Officer
or any director shall from time to time determine.

         (c) Notice of Meetings. Notice shall be given to each director of each
meeting, including the time, place and purpose of such meeting. Notice of each
such meeting shall be mailed to each director, addressed to him or her at his or
her residence or usual place of business, at least two days before the date on
which such meeting is to be held, or shall be sent to him or her at such place
by telegraph, cable, wireless or other form of recorded communication, or be
delivered personally or by telephone not later than the day before the day on
which such meeting is to be held, but notice need not be given to any director
who shall attend such meeting. A written waiver of notice, signed by the person
entitled thereto, whether before or after the time of the meeting stated
therein, shall be deemed equivalent to notice.

         (d) Place of Meetings. The Board may hold its meetings at such place or
places within or outside the State of Delaware as the Board may from time to
time determine, or as shall be designated in the respective notices or waivers
of notice thereof.

         (e) Quorum and Manner of Acting. A majority of the total number of
directors then in office shall be present in person at any meeting of the Board
in order to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at such meeting,
and the vote of a majority of those directors present at any such meeting at
which a quorum is present shall be necessary for the passage of any
                                                                             G-6


resolution or act of the Board, except as otherwise expressly required by law or
these Bylaws. In the absence of a quorum for any such meeting, a majority of the
directors  present  thereat may adjourn  such  meeting from time to time until a
quorum shall be present.

         (f) Organization. At each meeting of the Board, one of the following
shall act as chairman of the meeting and preside thereat, in the following order
of precedence:

                  (i) the Chairman, if any;

                  (ii) the Chief Executive Officer (if a director); or

                  (iii) any director designated by a majority of the directors
present.

The Secretary or, in the case of his or her absence, an Assistant Secretary, if
an Assistant Secretary has been appointed and is present, or any person whom the
chairman of the meeting shall appoint shall act as secretary of such meeting and
keep the minutes thereof.

3.6      Directors' Consent in Lieu of Meeting.

         Any action required or permitted to be taken at any meeting of the
Board may be taken without a meeting, without prior notice and without a vote,
if a consent in writing, setting forth the action so taken, shall be signed by
all of the directors then in office and such consent is filed with the minutes
of the proceedings of the Board.

3.7      Action by Means of Conference Telephone or Similar Communications
Equipment.

         Any one or more members of the Board may participate in a meeting of
the Board by means of conference telephone or similar communications equipment
by which all persons participating in the meeting can hear each other, and
participation in a meeting by such means shall constitute presence in person at
such meeting.

3.8      Committees.

         The Board may, by resolution or resolutions passed by a majority of the
whole Board, designate one or more committees, such committee or committees to
have such name or names as may be determined from time to time by resolution
adopted by the Board, and each such committee to consist of one or more
directors of the Corporation, which to the extent provided in said resolution or
resolutions shall have and may exercise the powers of the Board in the
management of the business and affairs of the Corporation and may authorize the
seal of the Corporation to be affixed to all papers which may require it. A
majority of all the members of any such committee may determine its action and
fix the time and place of its meetings, unless the Board shall otherwise
provide. The Board shall have power to change the members of any such committee
at any time, to fill vacancies and to discharge any such committee, either with
or without cause, at any time.
                                                                             G-7



                                   ARTICLE IV

                                    OFFICERS

4.1      Executive Officers.

         The principal officers of the Corporation shall be a Chairman, a Chief
Executive Officer, a Secretary and a Treasurer, and may include such other
officers as the Board may appoint pursuant to Section 4.3 of this Article IV.
Any two or more offices may be held by the same person.

4.2      Authority and Duties.

         All officers, as between themselves and the Corporation, shall have
such authority and perform such duties in the management of the Corporation as
may be provided in these Bylaws or, to the extent so provided, by the Board.

4.3      Other Officers.

         The Corporation may have such other officers, agents and employees as
the Board may deem necessary, including, a President, one or more Assistant
Secretaries, one or more Assistant Treasurers and one or more Vice Presidents,
each of whom shall hold office for such period, have such authority and perform
such duties as the Board, the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer may from
time to time determine. The Board may delegate to any principal officer the
power to appoint and define the authority and duties of, or remove, any such
officers, agents or employees.

4.4      Term of Office, Resignation and Removal.

         All officers shall be elected or appointed by the Board and shall hold
office for such term as may be prescribed by the Board. Each officer shall hold
office until his or her successor has been elected or appointed and qualified or
until his or her earlier death or resignation or removal in the manner
hereinafter provided. The Board may require any officer to give security for the
faithful performance of his or her duties.

         Any officer may resign at any time by giving written notice to the
Board, the Chairman, the Chief Executive Officer or the Secretary. Such
resignation shall take effect at the time specified therein or, if the time be
not specified, at the time it is accepted by action of the Board. Except as
aforesaid, the acceptance of such resignation shall not be necessary to make it
effective.

         All officers and agents elected or appointed by the Board shall be
subject to removal at any time by the Board or by the stockholders of the
Corporation with or without cause.
                                                                             G-8



4.5      Vacancies.

         If the office of Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, Secretary or
Treasurer becomes vacant for any reason, the Board shall fill such vacancy, and
if any other office becomes vacant, the Board may fill such vacancy. Any officer
so appointed or elected by the Board shall serve only until such time as the
unexpired term of his or her predecessor shall have expired, unless reelected or
reappointed by the Board.

4.6      The Chairman.

         The Chairman shall give counsel and advice to the Board and the
officers of the Corporation on all subjects concerning the welfare of the
Corporation and the conduct of its business and shall perform such other duties
as the Board may from time to time determine. Unless otherwise determined by the
Board, he or she shall preside at meetings of the Board and of the Stockholders
at which he is present.

4.7      The Chief Executive Officer.

         Unless otherwise determined by the Board, the Chief Executive Officer
shall be the chief executive officer of the Corporation. The Chief Executive
Officer shall have general and active management and control of the business and
affairs of the Corporation subject to the control of the Board and shall see
that all orders and resolutions of the Board are carried into effect. The Chief
Executive Officer shall from time to time make such reports of the affairs of
the Corporation as the Board of Directors may require and shall perform such
other duties as the Board may from time to time determine.

4.8      The Secretary.

         The Secretary shall, to the extent practicable, attend all meetings of
the Board and all meetings of the stockholders and shall record all votes and
the minutes of all proceedings in a book to be kept for that purpose. He or she
may give, or cause to be given, notice of all meetings of the stockholders and
of the Board, and shall perform such other duties as may be prescribed by the
Board, the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer, under whose supervision he
or she shall act. He or she shall keep in safe custody the seal of the
Corporation and affix the same to any duly authorized instrument requiring it
and, when so affixed, it shall be attested by his or her signature or by the
signature of the Treasurer or, if appointed, an Assistant Secretary or an
Assistant Treasurer. He or she shall keep in safe custody the certificate books
and stockholder records and such other books and records as the Board may
direct, and shall perform all other duties incident to the office of Secretary
and such other duties as from time to time may be assigned to him or her by the
Board, the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer.

4.9      The Treasurer.

         The Treasurer shall have the care and custody of the corporate funds
and other valuable effects, including securities, shall keep full and accurate
accounts of receipts and disbursements in books belonging to the Corporation and
shall deposit all moneys and other valuable effects in

                                                                             G-9


the name and to the credit of the  Corporation  in such  depositories  as may be
designated  by  the  Board.  The  Treasurer  shall  disburse  the  funds  of the
Corporation  as may be ordered by the Board,  taking  proper  vouchers  for such
disbursements,  shall  render  to the  Chairman,  Chief  Executive  Officer  and
directors, at the regular meetings of the Board or whenever they may require it,
an account of all his  transactions as Treasurer and of the financial  condition
of the  Corporation and shall perform all other duties incident to the office of
Treasurer  and such other  duties as from time to time may be assigned to him or
her by the Board, the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer.

                                    ARTICLE V

                 CONTRACTS, CHECKS, DRAFTS, BANK ACCOUNTS, ETC.

5.1      Execution of Documents.

The Board shall designate, by either specific or general resolution, the
officers, employees and agents of the Corporation who shall have the power to
execute and deliver deeds, contracts, mortgages, bonds, debentures, checks,
drafts and other orders for the payment of money and other documents for and in
the name of the Corporation, and may authorize such officers, employees and
agents to delegate such power (including authority to redelegate) by written
instrument to other officers, employees or agents of the Corporation. Unless so
designated or expressly authorized by these Bylaws, no officer, employee or
agent shall have any power or authority to bind the Corporation by any contract
or engagement, to pledge its credit or to render it liable pecuniarily for any
purpose or amount.

5.2      Deposits.

         All funds of the Corporation not otherwise employed shall be deposited
from time to time to the credit of the Corporation or otherwise as the Board or
Treasurer, or any other officer of the Corporation to whom power in this respect
shall have been given by the Board, shall select.


5.3      Proxies with Respect to Stock or Other Securities of Other
Corporations.

         The Board shall designate the officers of the Corporation who shall
have authority from time to time to appoint an agent or agents of the
Corporation to exercise in the name and on behalf of the Corporation the powers
and rights which the Corporation may have as the holder of stock or other
securities in any other corporation, and to vote or consent with respect to such
stock or securities. Such designated officers may instruct the person or persons
so appointed as to the manner of exercising such powers and rights, and such
designated officers may execute or cause to be executed in the name and on
behalf of the Corporation and under its corporate seal or otherwise, such
written proxies, powers of attorney or other instruments as they may deem
necessary or proper in order that the Corporation may exercise its powers and
rights.
                                                                            G-10



                                   ARTICLE VI

                  SHARES AND THEIR TRANSFER; FIXING RECORD DATE

6.1      Certificates for Shares.

         Every owner of stock of the Corporation shall be entitled to have a
certificate certifying the number and class of shares owned by him, her or it in
the Corporation, which shall be in such form as shall be prescribed by the
Board. Certificates shall be numbered and issued in consecutive order and shall
be signed by, or in the name of, the Corporation by the Chairman, the Chief
Executive Officer or any Vice President, and by the Treasurer (or an Assistant
Treasurer, if appointed) or the Secretary (or an Assistant Secretary, if
appointed). In case any officer or officers who shall have signed any such
certificate or certificates shall cease to be such officer or officers of the
Corporation, whether because of death, resignation or otherwise, before such
certificate or certificates shall have been delivered by the Corporation, such
certificate or certificates may nevertheless be adopted by the Corporation and
be issued and delivered as though the person or persons who signed such
certificate had not ceased to be such officer or officers of the Corporation.

6.2      Record.

         A record in one or more counterparts shall be kept of the name of the
person, firm or corporation owning the shares represented by each certificate
for stock of the Corporation issued, the number of shares represented by each
such certificate, the date thereof and, in the case of cancellation, the date of
cancellation. Except as otherwise expressly required by law, the person in whose
name shares of stock stand on the stock record of the Corporation shall be
deemed the owner thereof for all purposes regarding the Corporation.

6.3      Transfer and Registration of Stock.

         The transfer of stock and certificates which represent the stock of the
Corporation shall be governed by Article 8 of Subtitle 1 of Title 6 of the
Delaware Code (the Uniform Commercial Code), as amended from time to time.

         Registration of transfers of shares of the Corporation shall be made
only on the books of the Corporation upon request of the registered holder
thereof, or of his, her or its attorney thereunto authorized by power of
attorney duly executed and filed with the Secretary of the Corporation, and upon
the surrender of the certificate or certificates for such shares properly
endorsed or accompanied by a stock power duly executed.

6.4      Addresses of Stockholders.

         Each stockholder shall designate to the Secretary an address at which
notices of meetings and all other corporate notices may be served or mailed to
him, her or it, and, if any stockholder shall fail to designate such address,
corporate notices may be served upon him, her or it by mail

                                                                            G-11


directed to him, her or it at his, her or its  post-office  address,  if any, as
the same appears on the share record books of the  Corporation or at his, her or
its last known post-office address.

6.5      Lost, Destroyed and Mutilated Certificates.

         The holder of any shares of the Corporation shall immediately notify
the Corporation of any loss, destruction or mutilation of the certificate
therefor, and the Board may, in its discretion, cause to be issued to him, her
or it a new certificate or certificates for such shares, upon the surrender of
the mutilated certificates or, in the case of loss or destruction of the
certificate, upon satisfactory proof of such loss or destruction, and the Board
may, in its discretion, require the owner of the lost or destroyed certificate
or his, her or its legal representative to give the Corporation a bond in such
sum and with such surety or sureties as it may direct to indemnify the
Corporation against any claim that may be made against it on account of the
alleged loss or destruction of any such certificate.

6.6      Regulations.

         The Board may make such rules and regulations as it may deem expedient,
not inconsistent with these Bylaws, concerning the issue, transfer and
registration of certificates for stock of the Corporation.

6.7      Fixing Date for Determination of Stockholders of Record.

         (a) In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders
entitled to notice of or to vote at any meeting of stockholders or any
adjournment thereof, the Board may fix a record date, which record date shall
not precede the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted
by the Board, and which record date shall be not more than 60 nor less than 10
days before the date of such meeting. If no record date is fixed by the Board,
the record date for determining stockholders entitled to notice of or to vote at
a meeting of stockholders shall be at the close of business on the day next
preceding the day on which notice is given, or, if notice is waived, at the
close of business on the day next preceding the day on which the meeting is
held. A determination of stockholders of record entitled to notice of or to vote
at a meeting of stockholders shall apply to any adjournment of the meeting;
provided, however, that the Board may fix a new record date for the adjourned
meeting.

         (b) In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders
entitled to consent to corporate action in writing without a meeting, the Board
may fix a record date, which record date shall not precede the date upon which
the resolution fixing the record date is adopted by the Board, and which date
shall be not more than 10 days after the date upon which the resolution fixing
the record date is adopted by the Board. If no record date has been fixed by the
Board, the record date for determining stockholders entitled to consent to
corporate action in writing without a meeting, when no prior action by the Board
is required by the Delaware Statute, shall be the first date on which a signed
written consent setting forth the action taken or proposed to be taken is
delivered to the Corporation by delivery to its registered office in the State
of Delaware, its principal place of business or an officer or agent of the
Corporation having custody of the book in which proceedings of meetings of
stockholders are recorded. Delivery made to the

                                                                            G-12


Corporation's  registered  office shall be by hand or by certified or registered
mail,  return receipt  requested.  If no record date has been fixed by the Board
and prior  action by the Board is required by the Delaware  Statute,  the record
date for  determining  stockholders  entitled to consent to corporate  action in
writing  without a meeting shall be at the close of business on the day on which
the Board adopts the resolution taking such prior action.

         (c) In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders
entitled to receive payment of any dividend or other distribution or allotment
of any rights or the stockholders entitled to exercise any rights in respect of
any change, conversion or exchange of stock, or for the purpose of any other
lawful action, the Board may fix a record date, which record date shall not
precede the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted,
and which record date shall be not more than 60 days prior to such action. If no
record date is fixed, the record date for determining stockholders for any such
purpose shall be at the close of business on the day on which the Board adopts
the resolution relating thereto.

                                   ARTICLE VII

                          INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE

7.1      Indemnification.

         (a) As provided in the Certificate, to the fullest extent permitted by
the Delaware Statute as the same exists or may hereafter be amended, a director
of the Corporation shall not be liable to the Corporation or its stockholders
for breach of fiduciary duty as a director.

         (b) Without limitation of any right conferred by paragraph (a) of this
Section 7.1, each person who was or is made a party or is threatened to be made
a party to or is otherwise involved in any threatened, pending or completed
action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or
investigative (hereinafter a "proceeding"), by reason of the fact that he or she
is or was a director, officer or employee of the Corporation or is or was
serving at the request of the Corporation as a director, officer or employee of
another corporation or of a partnership, joint venture, trust or other
enterprise, including service with respect to an employee benefit plan
(hereinafter an "indemnitee"), whether the basis of such proceeding is alleged
action in an official capacity while serving as a director, officer or employee
or in any other capacity while serving as a director, officer or employee, shall
be indemnified and held harmless by the Corporation to the fullest extent
authorized by the Delaware Statute, as the same exists or may hereafter be
amended (but, in the case of any such amendment, only to the extent that such
amendment permits the Corporation to provide broader indemnification rights than
permitted prior thereto), against all expense, liability and loss (including
attorneys' fees, judgments, fines, excise taxes or amounts paid in settlement)
reasonably incurred or suffered by such indemnitee in connection therewith and
such indemnification shall continue as to an indemnitee who has ceased to be a
director, officer or employee and shall inure to the benefit of the indemnitee's
heirs, testators, intestates, executors and administrators; provided, however,
that such person acted in good faith and in a manner he or she reasonably
believed to be in, or not opposed to, the best interests of the Corporation, and
with respect to a criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to
believe his or her conduct was unlawful; provided further, however, that no

                                                                            G-13


indemnification shall be made in the case of an action, suit or proceeding by or
in the right of the Corporation in relation to matters as to which it shall be
adjudged in such action, suit or proceeding that such director, officer,
employee or agent is liable to the Corporation, unless a court having
jurisdiction shall determine that, despite such adjudication, such person is
fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification; provided further, however,
that, except as provided in Section 7.1(c) of this Article VII with respect to
proceedings to enforce rights to indemnification, the Corporation shall
indemnify any such indemnitee in connection with a proceeding (or part thereof)
initiated by such indemnitee only if such proceeding (or part thereof) initiated
by such indemnitee was authorized by the Board of Directors of the Corporation.
The right to indemnification conferred in this Article VII shall be a contract
right and shall include the right to be paid by the Corporation the expenses
incurred in defending any such proceeding in advance of its final disposition
(hereinafter an "advancement of expenses"); provided, however, that, if the
Delaware Statute requires, an advancement of expenses incurred by an indemnitee
in his or her capacity as a director or officer (and not in any other capacity
in which service was or is rendered by such indemnitee, including, without
limitation, service to an employee benefit plan) shall be made only upon
delivery to the Corporation of an undertaking (hereinafter an "undertaking"), by
or on behalf of such indemnitee, to repay all amounts so advanced if it shall
ultimately be determined by final judicial decision from which there is no
further right to appeal (hereinafter a "final adjudication") that such
indemnitee is not entitled to be indemnified for such expenses under this
Section or otherwise.

         (c) If a claim under Section 7.1(b) of this Article VII is not paid in
full by the Corporation within 60 days after a written claim has been received
by the Corporation, except in the case of a claim for an advancement of
expenses, in which case the applicable period shall be 20 days, the indemnitee
may at any time thereafter bring suit against the Corporation to recover the
unpaid amount of the claim. If successful in whole or in part in any such suit,
or in a suit brought by the Corporation to recover an advancement of expenses
pursuant to the terms of any undertaking, the indemnitee shall be entitled to be
paid also the expense of prosecuting or defending such suit. In (i) any suit
brought by the indemnitee to enforce a right to indemnification hereunder (but
not in a suit brought by the indemnitee to enforce a right to an advancement of
expenses) it shall be a defense that, and (ii) in any suit by the Corporation to
recover an advancement of expenses pursuant to the terms of an undertaking, the
Corporation shall be entitled to recover such expenses upon a final adjudication
that, the indemnitee has not met the applicable standard of conduct set forth in
the Delaware Statute. Neither the failure of the Corporation (including the
Board, independent legal counsel, or the stockholders) to have made a
determination prior to the commencement of such suit that indemnification of the
indemnitee is proper in the circumstances because the indemnitee has met the
applicable standard of conduct set forth in the Delaware Statute, nor an actual
determination by the Corporation (including the Board, independent legal counsel
or the stockholders) that the indemnitee has not met such applicable standard of
conduct, shall create a presumption that the indemnitee has not met the
applicable standard of conduct or, in the case of such a suit brought by the
indemnitee, be a defense to such suit. In any suit brought by the indemnitee to
enforce a right to indemnification or to an advancement of expenses hereunder,
or by the Corporation to recover an advancement of expenses pursuant to the
terms of an undertaking, the burden of proving that the indemnitee is not
entitled to be indemnified, or to such advancement of expenses, under this
Section or otherwise shall be on the Corporation.

                                                                            G-14


         (d) The rights to indemnification and to the advancement of expenses
conferred in this Article VII shall not be exclusive of any other right which
any person may have or hereafter acquire under any statute, the Certificate,
agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or otherwise.

7.2      Insurance.

         The Corporation may purchase and maintain insurance, at its expense, to
protect itself and any person who is or was a director, officer, employee or
agent of the Corporation or any person who is or was serving at the request of
the Corporation as a director, officer, employer or agent of another
corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise against any
expense, liability or loss, whether or not the Corporation would have the power
to indemnify such person against such expense, liability or loss under the
Delaware Statute.

                                  ARTICLE VIII

8.1      Seal.

         The Board may provide a corporate seal, which shall be in the form of a
circle and shall bear the full name of the Corporation, the year of
incorporation of the Corporation and the words and figures "Corporate Seal -
Delaware."

8.2      Fiscal Year.

         The fiscal year of the Corporation shall end March 31 unless otherwise
determined by the Board.

8.3      Amendment.

         Any bylaw (including these Bylaws) may be adopted, amended or repealed
by the vote of the holders of a majority of the shares then entitled to vote or
by the stockholders' written consent pursuant to Section 2.11 of Article II, or
by the vote of the Board or by the directors' written consent pursuant to
Section 3.6 of Article III.

                                     * * * *


                                                                            G-15


================================================================================

Table of Contents

                                                     Page

   Letter on Behalf of Board of Directors............N/A
   Summary Term Sheet................................1
   Voting Securities.................................2
   Proposed Sale Transaction.........................4
   Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial              PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
      Holders and Management.........................10  Consent Solicitation
   Authorize the Reincorporation of the Company          Statement
       As a Delaware Corporation.....................12  dated July __, 2004
   Comparison of Rights of Holders of
      the Company's and PerfectData Delaware's
      Common Stock...................................16
   Description of the Company and
       PerfectData Capital Stock.....................29
   Dissenters' Rights................................31
   Miscellaneous.....................................35
   Appendix A - Copy of Asset Purchase
         Agreement dated as of October 3, 2003.......A-1
   Appendix B - Copy of First Amendment dated
         as of February 26, 2004 to the
         Asset Purchase Agreement....................B-1
   Appendix C - California Statutory
         Provisions as to Dissenters' Rights.........C-1
   Appendix D - Financial Statements
         March 31, 2004 and 2003 and
         Related Management's Discussion
         and Analysis................................D-1
   Appendix E - Copy of Agreement and Plan
         of Merger dated as of August   , 2004.........E-1
   Appendix F - Certificate of Incorporation
         Of PerfectData (Delaware) Inc...............F-1
   Appendix G - Bylaws of PerfectData
         (Delaware) Inc..............................G-1

================================================================================




                             PERFECTDATA CORPORATION
                          1445 East Los Angeles Avenue
                                    Suite 208
                              Simi Valley, CA 93605
          This Consent is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors


The undersigned hereby consents, with respect to all of the shares of the Common
Stock of PerfectData Corporation (the "Company") held of record by the
undersigned on July   , 2004, as follows:

1. With respect to the proposal to sell the Company's operating assets to Spray
Products Corporation:

                         [ ]FOR            [ ]AGAINST           [ ]ABSTAIN

2. With respect to the proposal to reincorporate the Company in the State of
Delaware:

                         [ ]FOR            [ ]AGAINST           [ ]ABSTAIN

This consent, when executed, will be voted in the manner directed by the
undersigned shareholder(s). If no direction is made, this consent will be voted
FOR proposals 1 and 2.

PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE, AND RETURN THIS CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE


                    Please sign exactly as your name appears to the left. When
                    shares are held by joint tenants, please both sign. When
                    signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or
                    guardian, please give full title as such. If a corporation,
                    please sign in full corporate name by the President or other
                    authorized officer. If a partnership, please sign in full
                    partnership name by a duly authorized person.



                    ------------------------------------
                                   Signature



                    ------------------------------------
                          Signature, if held jointly



                    Date:    _________________________, 2004