The Inquirer-Home

Data recovery firm lists its strangest cases

Server room brawls and flying laptops
Fri Dec 04 2009, 15:28

INFORMATION GETS DAMAGED in the strangest ways, as discovered by data recovery firm Kroll Ontrack, which recently revealed some of the strangest requests from its clients.

This year's Data Disaster League exposed the extent of accidental reformats, household accidents and even a server room scuffle that had users coming to them to attempt to resurrect lost data.

"Ontrack Data Recovery engineers see more than 50,000 data recoveries annually. While some are extreme, it is important to note that advances in technology and expertise make no situation impossible," boasted Phil Bridge, managing director for Kroll Ontrack in the UK.

The top 10 list ranged from the sublime, including a laptop falling from the second floor of an office and a camera flying free from a bike basket, through to the comical, which included the likes of someone leaving their laptop on the roof of their car and then having it fly off when they sped away, as well as various pet related accidents such as a cat being sick all over the computer after eating some defrosting meat.

shipping-accident

Topping the list for bizarre data loss stories have to be number six, two and one, which respectively recount a brawl between two colleagues in a server room which caused one of the racks to tip over, a drive that went overboard - spending six months 200ft below the waves before being recovered - and a hapless criminal who thought that ditching his laptop out a 12-story window during a police raid would mean that the incriminating evidence would surely be destroyed.

We applaud Kroll's efforts towards making sure that vital data is recovered when accidents - or indeed even deliberate attempts to subvert the course of justice - occur.

But we also would remind everyone that regular backups can be a much more effective way of making sure that those precious bits don't byte you in the arse. µ

Share this:

Comments
@Rui

Brilliant !
If that were on a T-shirt I'd buy one.
I had a good laugh out of that, thank you sir.

posted by : Pascal Monett, 09 December 2009 Complain about this comment
Offsite Backups...

... that's the solution.

posted by : Erick Mentos, 07 December 2009 Complain about this comment
Almost as good

You should take a look at the data recovery people who were called in to rescue data from hard drives from the 9/11 disaster area.

Try chipping off a few pounds of melted concrete off a hard drive first...

Images on line...

posted by : Stuart Halliday, 05 December 2009 Complain about this comment
few days back my friend's Balckberry survived fall on hard street from roof of house's second story

few days back my friend's Balckberry survived fall on hard street from roof of house's second story it was in his shirt front pocket while leaning over, its screen is shattered and and casing etc but still is recieving calls. My own P900 survived bouncing all stairs steps of a floor. i once threw my p900in at sofa in anger, it bounced all way upto roof and came down and survived.

Rui is right at age 29, i last "wept" some 4yrs back because my hdd slipped from my hand pn hard floor and it was not dtecting, on little shaking i could sense the head has gone free, it was seagate 40gb,i tried later in evening and was detected, moved all data to OS drive. The ttoal loss i had was a seagate 20gb on which i was authoring the most ambitious xp tweaking guide (trust me i know more than on internet) som ehiden powers made my hdd fail and since then i.e. 4yrs i couldnt put time agin for this project. i run 1.2-TB at home all WesternDigital.

posted by : Muhammad Imran/mi1400, 05 December 2009 Complain about this comment
Backups?

Real men don't do backups...

... but they cry a lot.

posted by : Rui, 04 December 2009 Complain about this comment
aboutus
Advertisement
Subscribe to INQ newsletters
Advertisement
INQ Poll

Authorities in several countries raided Megaupload recently, shut down all of its services, seized hundreds of servers and arrested several of its executives on criminal charges.

Do you think the move was justified?