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Data loss can happen for several reasons the most sever is hardware failure.
this requires the hard drive to be opened in a clean room and repaired. However
there are times where the hard drive itself is not malfunctioning and in these
cases we refer to the loss of data as "Logical Data Recovery". Our data recovery
software will provide results in most of these cases. In these cases data has
been lost due to accidental deletion, format, Fdisk or virus attack
Cost of Data loss
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- U.S.
businesses loose over $12 billion per year
because of data loss.
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Hardware or system failure accounts for 78%
of all data loss.
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Human error accounts for 11% of all data
loss.
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Software corruption account for 7% of all
data loss.
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Natural disasters account for only 1% of all
data loss.
- More
vital data is being stored in smaller
spaces.
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Instant access to electronic data has become
more crucial in day-to-day business.
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Disaster prevention and recovery plans are
often overlooked or outdated.
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Backup tools and techniques are not 100%
reliable.
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- 93%
of companies that lost their data center for
10 days or more due to a disaster filed for
bankruptcy within one year of the disaster.
50% of businesses that found themselves
without data management for this same time
period filed for bankruptcy immediately.
(Source: National Archives & Records
Administration in Washington)
- File
corruption and data loss are becoming much
more common, although loss of productivity
continues to be the major cost associated
with a virus disaster. (Source: 7th
Annual ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey,
March 2002)
- The
average company spends between $100,000 and
$1,000,000 in total ramifications per year
for desktop-oriented disasters (both hard
and soft costs.) (Source: 7th Annual
ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey, March
2002)
- In
addition to being more prevalent, computer
viruses were more costly, more destructive,
and caused more real damage to data and
systems than in the past. (Source: 7th
Annual ICSA Lab's Virus Prevalence Survey,
March 2002)
- Of
those companies participating in the 2001
Cost of Downtime Survey: 46% said each hour
of downtime would cost their companies up to
$50k, 28% said each hour would cost between
$51K and $250K, 18% said each hour would
cost between $251K and $1 million, 8% said
it would cost their companies more than
$1million per hour. (Source: Ontrack -
2001 Cost of Downtime Survey Results, 2001)
- At
what point is the survival of your company
at risk? 40% said 72 hours, 21% said 48
hours, 15% said 24 hours, 8% said 8 hours,
9% said 4 hours, 3% said 1 hour, 4% said
within the hour. (Source: Ontrack - 2001
Cost of Downtime Survey Results, 2001)
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Please contact Sean Breslin
Phone 612-296-6992
email sean@csi-wi.com
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