Data Recovery - LC Technology https://lc-tech.com/category/data-recovery-lctech/ Experts in Data Recovery Tue, 09 Aug 2022 20:52:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://lc-tech.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Data Recovery - LC Technology https://lc-tech.com/category/data-recovery-lctech/ 32 32 214194631 LC Tech saved data that no one else could! https://lc-tech.com/lc-tech-saved-data-that-no-one-else-could/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lc-tech-saved-data-that-no-one-else-could https://lc-tech.com/lc-tech-saved-data-that-no-one-else-could/#respond Thu, 04 Aug 2022 13:41:19 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=233802 LC Tech saved data that no one else could “There are very few instances where data corruption and data loss can be as distressing as on a job, but sadly I discovered this the hard way when I had a card failure on my wedding day! An upset client or Read more…

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LC Tech saved data that no one else could

bride holding flowers next to her groom

“There are very few instances where data corruption and data loss can be as distressing as on a job, but sadly I discovered this the hard way when I had a card failure on my wedding day! An upset client or boss is one thing, but I’m pretty sure most of us would prefer that over a disappointed wife/husband any day of the week.”

Out of the blue a couple of weeks ago Newsshooter was contacted by LC Tech, who are a large multinational data recovery lab based in Florida, but with offices in the UK (and soon to be in Japan, Netherlands, Hong Kong and Taiwan). As Dan and Matt knew my sob story they volunteered me to be a guinea pig for LC Tech’s services – to road test them for our audience in the case any of you might be in such a situation.

It only took four days after receiving my once-written-off CF card to have fully restored all the photos from my wedding day, and all but three of the videos!

This price varies based on the size of the card (mine was a 32GB), or whether your device is flash memory, SSD or a traditional hard drive. If they are unsuccessful there is no charge (except a bench fee on SSDs and HDDs), which is a great guarantee.

LC Tech also keep a copy of your data for 30 days, just to make sure you receive your recovered files and safely archive them.

So a happy ending to my story, but one that might not have been if I didn’t fully explore all available data recovery options.

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Number One Cause of Data Loss https://lc-tech.com/number-one-cause-of-data-loss/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=number-one-cause-of-data-loss Thu, 13 Jan 2022 21:40:42 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=120737 How is Human Error and Data Recovery Related? The #1 cause of lost data is human error. That important file that you needed for your company’s project was there a few minutes ago…what happened to it? Photos from the biggest wedding of the season? Did they just delete themselves from Read more…

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How is Human Error and Data Recovery Related? The #1 cause of lost data is human error. That important file that you needed for your company’s project was there a few minutes ago…what happened to it? Photos from the biggest wedding of the season? Did they just delete themselves from the memory card? Wait a minute, which SD card had the videos? Did they get formatted by accident? Did the memory card got removed from the camera before it was finished writing data?


Human Error is by far the #1 cause of lost and deleted files, accidentally formatted flash media, broken USB sticks, and countless frustrations, heartache, and lost revenue! Regardless of how prepared you are, all it takes is a momentary loss of focus, rushing to finish a project, or confusion and all your hard work, priceless photos and videos, or company presentations and documents can be gone from your memory cards or USB flash drives.


But are they really gone? In most cases, the raw data is still on the memory device. Your camera or computer just doesn’t know it’s still there. If you stopped what you were doing after you made your “mistake” and didn’t overwrite the old data with new data, odds are pretty good that you can get your priceless information back.
All you need to do is download a free trial of our world-class data recovery software and you will know for sure if you can get your valuable files back. One of our support experts can walk you through the process if you’re technically challenged or have questions. Also, if you accidentally damaged your memory card or USB stick, we can recover data from your device in our state-of-the-art recovery lab.

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Gloway Data Recovery https://lc-tech.com/gloway-data-recovery/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=gloway-data-recovery Wed, 12 Jan 2022 00:53:13 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=119713 C Technology is a global leader in data recovery and data recovery software. We recover data from all types of digital storage devices including hard drives, RAID’s, Flash drives, SD and microSD cards, and operating systems.

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Contact Information:

EMEA Office:
LC Tech Support Services, Ltd
Floor 4, 20 Fletcher Gate
Nottingham, UK NG1 2FZ
+44 (0)115 704 3306UK

Office Hours:

Monday9AM to 5:30PM GMT
Tuesday 9AM to 5:30PM GMT
Wednesday 9AM to 5:30PM GMT
Thursday 9AM to 5:30PM GMT
Friday 9AM to 5:30PM GMT
SaturdayClosed
SundayClosed

Welcome GLOWAY Customers!
尊敬的GLOWAY用户,欢迎您!

Through a special agreement with GLOWAY, LC Technology is authorized and recommended to perform data recovery on GLOWAY data storage devices.
由于GLOWAY与LC科技之间的长期合作伙伴关系,LC科技由GLOWAY授权并推荐,来为GLOWAY数据存储设备进行数据恢复。

LC Technology is a global leader in data recovery and data recovery software. We recover data from all types of digital storage devices including hard drives, RAID’s, Flash drives, SD and microSD cards, and operating systems.
LC科技是数据恢复服务和软件的全球领导者。我们从各种类型的数据存储设备中进行数据恢复,包括固态硬盘SSD, U盘随身碟,SD卡,CF卡,MicroSD卡,任何闪存设备,硬盘,RAIDs,以及操作系统等。GLOWAY Data Recovery by LC Technology provides you with a safe and reliable means of having your data safely recovered. Having served the data recovery industry for over 20 years, our staff of recovery technicians are experts in data recovery and they are truly the top of their field.

LC科技为GLOWAY的客户提供安全可靠的数据恢复解决方案。LC科技专注数据恢复已经20年,是全世界最早的数据恢复公司之一。我们的数据恢复团队是真正的数据恢复专家,数据恢复能力在该领域是全世界最顶尖的。

We recover data when others cannot!
当其他数据恢复公司恢复不了时,我们可以!

Please complete the form below. After we have received your information, an LC Technology representative will contact you for your next steps, along with an estimate of the cost of data recovery for your GLOWAY device.
请填写下面的表格。在我们收到您的信息后,LC科技的代表会尽快与您取得联系,并帮助您进入后面的步骤,并且让您了解您的设备进行数据恢复所需的大概费用

Recovery Lab Services

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  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

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How to Protect Data From Disasters? https://lc-tech.com/how-to-protect-data-from-disasters/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-protect-data-from-disasters Tue, 20 Jul 2021 13:58:57 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=43299 With hurricane season in full bloom and the additional prospect of natural disasters, the importance for companies to have disaster data plans in place is paramount. So why is it important to Protect Data From Disasters? Companies that fail to make recovery plans for their electronic gear and essential data Read more…

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With hurricane season in full bloom and the additional prospect of natural disasters, the importance for companies to have disaster data plans in place is paramount. So why is it important to Protect Data From Disasters?

Companies that fail to make recovery plans for their electronic gear and essential data are inviting serious financial injury when an emergency strikes.

TechNewsWorld discussed disaster preparedness with a panel of IT experts. Check out their recommendations — and make sure that you have not forgotten that one key thing that many companies forget to protect but regret afterward.

IDC Findings

A 2018 IDC report entitled “The State of IT Resilience” warns businesses not to fall into the trap that snarls many companies each year when emergencies happen. These firms view disaster recovery (DR) preparedness as an insurance policy and an added expense that is likely to have little payback.

This approach to disaster recovery is inadequate for today’s digital businesses. If DR tools and initiatives are viewed as a cost center objective and not as a business driver, an organization’s cloud and digital transformation (DX) initiatives will be exposed to a higher rate of failure, the report warns.

Other research estimates that as many as half of all organizations could not survive a disaster event. That research also found that many businesses do not properly protect their data, test their disaster recovery environment, or have automated DR processes in place.

“After an already stressful 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, forecasters are expecting an above-average number of hurricanes this season. Regrettably, many businesses may be unprepared to weather those storms and could experience permanent data loss if they aren’t ready from an IT perspective,” Caroline Seymour, vice president of product marketing at Zerto, told TechNewsWorld.

To avoid becoming another victim, she recommends maintaining critical business operations, preserving valuable data, and ensuring IT resilience by having a formal DR plan in place that can be enacted rapidly.

In addition to having cloud-based disaster recovery technology implemented and tested, IT teams need to practice their DR plans to understand what works well and where there are opportunities for improvement, Seymour cautioned.

The Cost of Not Preparing

IT resilience — essential to disaster recovery — is a measure of an organization’s ability to protect data during planned disruptive events, effectively react to unplanned events, and accelerate data-oriented business initiatives. It includes traditional disaster recovery and backup tools, and also incorporates advanced analytics and security capabilities needed for the success of any digital business in the 21st century.

IDC’s research found that many organizations are seeing new forms of disruptions, such as ransomware, cause considerable downtime.

Here are some key findings from IDC’s disaster recovery research:

  • More than half of the respondents are currently undertaking IT or digital transformation projects and view IT resilience. They see IT resilience as foundational. But few respondents believe their IT resilience strategy is optimized.
  • Most organizations surveyed have experienced tech-related business disruptions. These situations resulted in material impact in terms of either recovery cost or additional staff hours, direct loss of revenue, permanent loss of data, or damage to company reputation.
  • Data protection (DP) and disaster recovery (DR) are central tenets of digital transformation initiatives but may not be prioritized by many organizations.
  • Only half of all apps are fully covered by a DR strategy. This indicates a disconnect at the business strategy level regarding the importance of data protection and data recovery to the organization’s initiatives.

Much Can Go Wrong

The research found that many companies struggle with the cost, complexity, and orchestration of their data protection and disaster recovery solutions. Almost half of the respondents (45 percent) reported challenges with restore or backup reliability.

The complexity of the backup and recovery process was also a leading challenge for 43 percent of the companies. These factors have a high probability of delaying or disrupting IT transformation (DX) initiatives.

That complexity process is pushing some 90 percent of the participating companies to pursue a convergence of backup and DR tools as they eliminate redundant tools. This indicates that users increasingly see backup and DR functions not as siloed products by as complementary assets of a single solution.

Researchers believe the best practice for corporate data recovery is to define what IT resilience means for their organization and develop a plan for implementation. That definition should begin with the core elements of data protection, backup, and disaster recovery.

It should also account for emerging security threats and address the requirements of all business applications. That includes on-premises or public cloud-based. It should not include a one-size-fits-all IT resilience solution.

“As of July 2020, the US has experienced 10 weather- and climate-related disaster events, losing more than $1 billion each time. This does not even count the storms that took out parts of the Northeast last week (Hurricane Asaias),” Jennifer Curry, vice president of Global Cloud Services at INAP, told TechNewsWorld.

Recipe for Recovery

Successful disaster preparedness entails prioritization and communication. Curry outlined three ways companies can protect their data and information before disaster strikes:

Step One: Identify Risks
For many organizations, losing data and information is the biggest threat. Start by identifying where their data is stored, if there are copies, and if so, where are the copies stored (onsite or in a separate location).

“Having all information stored in one place is extremely risky because one natural disaster can wipe out everything,” she said.

Step Two: Think About Off-Site Backups
If an organization does store data separate from its primary location, that is half the battle.

“To further protect their assets, companies should select a backup site that is in a different geographical region to reduce the chances that both locations would be knocked out by one disaster,” she reasoned.

Step Three: Consider Disaster Recovery Solutions
Many companies use cloud storage as a backup since it is easily scaled and cost-effective. However, a more robust option is disaster recovery as a service (DRaaS).

“DRaaS is essentially a facility redundancy in company infrastructures. It replicates mission-critical information, applications, and data so companies can maintain business continuity during natural disasters,” Curry explained.

“IT teams will be strapped when disaster strikes, and rather than having them tackle multiple requests from stakeholders across the organization, they are more successful if they have a prioritized list of applications,” she offered.

INAP tells clients to make sure comprehensive business continuity is developed before a devastating event happens. This also serves as an opportunity to identify the risks and gaps that may be commonly missed.

Balancing the Risks

Managing data loss is a case of reducing risks and consequences. The risk cannot and will not ever reach zero, according to David Zimmerman, CEO of LC Technology International.

“Events like fires, floods, tornados, earthquakes, and other disasters can result in business-altering data losses. Floods (especially salt water) severely damage equipment such as servers, SD cards, and laptops. With corrosion from seawater, data recovery might be impossible,” he told TechNewsWorld.

However, the right mix of training, corporate protocols, and cloud backups can greatly reduce the downsides of any data losses, making them slight inconveniences instead of business-ending disasters, he added.

Companies can protect their electronics and data during an emergency by incorporating the risks of data loss into a disaster recovery plan that evaluates the physical and virtual locations of their data. Then review how susceptible both would be to loss from fire, floods, or other events, suggested Zimmerman.

Sidestep Mishaps

Many small business operators with no IT staff tend to think a single backup to an external hard drive or storage uploads to a cloud service is all they need. This is dangerous thinking, according to Zimmerman.

Just because your business does not have a full staff with a fancy data management system does not mean you cannot take smaller, easy steps to protect your data.

“A single backup to a hard drive is the first step a business without the resources of an IT staff can do. However, it must go beyond that.

Without a formal data protection plan, all your hard work and content are at risk every day it is not duplicated. There are easy steps to proactively prevent this from happening,” he said.

Small business operators should follow what larger companies that have IT workers do. Implement a policy of redundancy.

This involves making multiple layers of backups, often more than you think is necessary. Create backups with the cloud combined with external hard drive storage. These should be used in tandem, not as replacements for each other, recommended Zimmerman.

“Managing the risk from any natural disaster should start with an inventory of all corporate-owned data. Back everything up to external hard drives — noting that these are kept off-site — that’s the important part. If a disaster strikes and all the data is held in the office, then the backups are pointless,” he offered.

One Thing Not to Forget

Many organizations still do not see the importance of creating a disaster recovery plan prior to a disaster happening, despite the massive risk of losing data that could impact the company’s future, Zimmerman shared. The most critical point of data recovery is proactivity.

“You don’t want to have to scramble to create a data recovery plan after a disaster strikes. The plan should function as a roadmap that includes all the sources and locations of data and who is responsible for it,” he advised.

Evaluating what to do and where to go after data is lost can be crippling to a business model, company reputation, and ability to actually do business. That can hurt any existing relationships with customers and partners.

“Forgetting to protect something is usually not the problem. What companies regret most is not doing periodic restore testing from backup data and testing disaster recovery plans. If companies are unprepared, it prolongs downtime and in some cases leads to data loss,” Shawn Lubahn, account product manager at Barracuda Networks, told TechNewsWorld. 

If you are interested in learning more about Manual Data Recovery, please visit our page:

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How Does TRIM Work? https://lc-tech.com/how-does-trim-work/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-does-trim-work Mon, 24 May 2021 14:49:27 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=25742 How Does TRIM Work? So, you have that new, bright, and shiny SSD drive for your computer. Your computer is now working better, and faster than it did before. But how does TRIM work? If you want to keep your SSD humming along swiftly, there are a few house-keeping processes Read more…

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How Does TRIM Work?

So, you have that new, bright, and shiny SSD drive for your computer. Your computer is now working better, and faster than it did before. But how does TRIM work?

If you want to keep your SSD humming along swiftly, there are a few house-keeping processes that you should do on a regular basis.

One of those processes is TRIM.

So, How Does TRIM Work? and what it is?

To answer “How Does TRIM Work”, we need to review how traditional hard drives and SSD’s work.

When you delete a file on the standard-type hard drive, your computer will just mark that file as deleted. Although deleted, that file’s data is technically still on the hard drive — that’s why deleted files may still be recoverable. Your computer will, in due course,  overwrite those deleted files when it overwrites their sectors with new data. This is why if you recently deleted files, and need to recover them, you do NOT want to continue to save data to that drive.

When you write a file to an SSD, your computer has to first erase any data in the sectors that it will be writing the data. The SSD can’t just overwrite the sectors in one operation like the traditional hard drive may. The SSD drive must first clear the sectors, then write to those empty sectors.

This means that an SSD will, over time slow down. Writing to the SSD’s sectors will be quick the first time. After you have deleted some files and then try to write to the SSD again, it will take longer.

With TRIM enabled, your computer’s operating system will tell the SSD each time it deletes a file. Then, the drive can erase the sectors containing the file’s contents, so writing to the sectors will be quicker in the future.

What are the benefits of using TRIM?

Basically, if you do not use TRIM, your SSD’s performance will slow over time.

Using TRIM command reduces the amount of data an SSD needs to move during the process described above and reduces the amount of erase cycles, thereby the life of the drive. By not copying any unnecessary, invalid  data, the write performance of your SSD drive increases.

Isn’t TRIM the same as Defrag?

No. TRIM is a process unique to SSD drives. Defrag is rearrangement of fragments of data on a hard drive that make up a file into closer proximity to speed access. SSD drives  do not have moving read/write heads like a traditional hard drive,  and thus they do not need traditional defragmentation. TRIM command on SSD drives helps to optimize the storage capacity of an SSD drive by telling the OS (operating system) to ignore any invalid or non-viable data. Because of this, your SSD drive writes faster, and will last longer.

Want To Maximize Your SSD’s Performance?

Of course you do! We developed Solid State Doctor™ – Solid State Drive Utility Suite for just this purpose.

Solid State Doctor™ – Solid State Drive Utility is an essential tool to provide performance enhancement, optimization, disk cloning capability, data security, and firmware management for Solid State Drives (SSD’s). More importantly, the SSD utility suite is a proactive support tool, giving you the ability to make informed decisions regarding your data – whether to back it up, erase it securely or optimize the drive using the TRIM* command. This suite is designed to enable maximum performance and lifespan of your Solid State Drive on Microsoft® Operating Systems. The Solid State Doctor™ – Solid State Drive Utility gives you access to some of the unique features built into today’s Solid State Drives.

To learn more about Solid State Doctor™, visit the Solid State Doctor™ product page.  A free evaluation copy of Solid State Doctor™ is available. The evaluation copy of Solid State Doctor™ will allow you to test-drive the software. The full list of features of Solid State Doctor™ will not be enabled in the evaluation version but will be enabled in the activated, licensed version.  Please note, Solid State Doctor™ is presently available for the Windows operating system only.

And that concludes answer to “How Does TRIM Work”.

Data Recovery for SSD Drives

If you should have lost data on your SSD, we have also developed products to help you get that data back.

SanDisk RescuePRO® Deluxe for SSD Drives is a data recovery solution designed for use with external Solid State Drives (SSD’s). SanDisk® RescuePRO® Deluxe for SSD’s is NOT designed to recover from system drives and works with external SSD drives only.

Featuring innovative recovery algorithms, RescuePRO® for SSD displays previews of the recoverable data.
It also features a worldwide first recovery algorithm for MPEG audio and MPEG video recovery (MPEG-1/2/3/4).

Whether your files were deleted, the media was corrupted or formatted, SanDisk RescuePRO® Deluxe for SSD Drives can help. The wizard-driven interface makes it easy to recover your files with just three mouse clicks. As with all of our software, a free evaluation copy is available for your to test-drive the software first.  Please visit the SanDisk RescuePRO® Deluxe for SSD Drives page to read more about this product, and to get your evaluation copy.

FILERECOVERY® file recovery software recovers files whether they have been deleted from the command line, from within an application, the file system, or removed from the recycle bin. FILERECOVERY® file recovery software recovers formatted or lost drives, drives with severe logical file system damage, and can even reconstruct lost RAIDs!    FILERECOVERY® can be used on internal SSD drives.   As with all of our software, a free evaluation copy is available for your to test-drive the software first.  Please visit the FILERECOVERY® page to read more about this product, and to get your evaluation copy.

In the event your PC is not able to recognize the device you are trying to recover from, we have experienced technicians who can perform a physical recovery at one of our data recovery centers. To contact our data recovery centers, just click here

>>>Manual Lab Recovery<<<<

If you are located in European region, please click here: >>>Manual Lab Recovery<<<<

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Video Loss Prevention and Post Production Nightmares https://lc-tech.com/video-loss-prevention/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=video-loss-prevention Wed, 31 Mar 2021 15:11:26 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=10379 Our CEO, David Zimmerman, was interviewed by Y. M. Cinema magazine, for his input on video loss prevention to avoid every editor’s nightmares.If you are a videographer, producer, or otherwise in the video business, this is an informative article.Keep it bookmarked for reference! Imagine heading back to your studio after Read more…

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Our CEO, David Zimmerman, was interviewed by Y. M. Cinema magazine, for his input on video loss prevention to avoid every editor’s nightmares.
If you are a videographer, producer, or otherwise in the video business, this is an informative article.
Keep it bookmarked for reference!

Imagine heading back to your studio after an intense shooting day, and surprisingly explore that your mini-mag has been bombed-out. Fortunately, this nightmare can easily be avoided. Read below those insights given by a data recovery expert about video loss prevention.

Losing your precious data is a by definition, a filmmaker’s nightmare that can happen to the best of us. However, the good news is that it can easily be avoided. We interviewed David Zimmerman, CEO of LC Technology International, which is a data recovery expert, who has worked with filmmakers of every level, from at-home amateurs to Hollywood content creators, to recover data from damaged, deleted, or corrupt devices. These are his tips.

The Achilles hill of the digital age

Avoiding many data-related nightmares in post-production is often a case of preparation. As the world moves to digital, the problems that arise are often related to the captured output of digital content. Differing file formats, various brands of flashcards, and unpredictable shooting conditions all come together to put data at risk. Thankfully, camera operators that take the time to understand how data is written and stored can put best practices in place for video loss prevention.

As the world moves to digital, the problems that arise are often related to the capture output of digital content

Camera operator’s fault

When errors are noticed in post-production, the problem is often with the storage card, and is caused by a case of “user error.” Here are some of the more common issues:

  • The camera operator turns off the camera before the data is fully written to the card. The camera is no longer recording, but the data is cached and needs a minute to move to the card without corruption.
  • The card is removed abruptly and interrupts the data being written to the card.
  • Cards are swapped between cameras. That is especially risky when utilizing the same card for two different camera types. Varying formats are structured differently, and interchanging cards can introduce errors.
  • Exposure to humidity fluctuations, liquids, or dirt can ruin the cards.
  • Operators should take care to discharge any static charge before carrying their equipment or handling flash cards.

Test your memory card regularly

Flashcards do wear out and should be tested periodically to ensure they’re functioning correctly. Consider using a utility that can test the speed and capacity of a card. If there are any issues, then put that card on the shelf and use a new one. It’s a classic risk-reward where you’re spending a little more on a high-end card, but avoiding a catastrophic video loss and costly production delays. There are numerous cases when bombed-out SanDisk professional cards were not recognized by the computer after intense shooting days.

Flashcards do wear out and should be tested periodically to ensure they’re functioning correctly

David Zimmerman, CEO of LC Technology International

Make several copies on different locations

A filmmaker shares his story: “I am a wedding videographer who had to do a force quit on my computer, and while I did it, I pulled an SD card out before it had time to sufficiently upload all those giant files. The next time I booted up and saw the files were gone – I put the card in, and NOTHING was on it except little boxes with an “!” in them, saying data was not there. I was sunk….”. There are two ways to avoid this: Perform a proper shutdown process and work off a copy

Created copies either on a different machine, the cloud, or an external drive

During post-production, someone will typically copy the content of the card and then load on their computer and edit it with their preferred studio-level product. They’re now working off of a hard drive instead of flash and must ensure they’ve created copies either on a different machine, the cloud, or an external drive. A separate physical location for one of the copies is a smart hedge against flood, theft, or fire. The time required to create backups is minimal, and the costs for storage fall every year, so there’s no excuse for being caught without backups. Moving a full 256 GB card to the cloud can take a few hours depending on your connection speed, but setting that in motion takes a few minutes.

The post-production work should always be done on a copy, leaving the original and backups as the fail-safes. Filmmakers that treat their recording media as long-term storage are setting themselves up for disaster. The cards are fragile and easy to lose and are meant as go-betweens from the camera to a more permanent location. Furthermore, for important studio-level work, it’s essential to use a single card for each project, and then implement strict rules for redundancies.

The next time I booted up and saw the files were gone – I put the card in, and NOTHING was on it except little boxes with an “!” in them, saying data was not there. I was sunk….

Fixing the card – cheaper than reshooting a scene

Fixing the card and format problems is possible with expert help. It’s indeed the last resort. However, it’s undoubtedly less expensive than gathering the team together and reshooting the scenes. Nevertheless, it’s crucial to choose the right expert for the job. Visit  LC Technology International for more info and help.

Summary

To simplify all that info, check out the slide below. It summarises all the important stuff which is pretty straightforward. Save it! It might save your data!

  • Do not turn the camera off before the data is fully written to the card
  • Perform Proper camera shutdown (NO hard shutdown)
  • Do not utilize the same card for 2 different cameras
  • Test your card periodically to ensure it functions properly
  • Discharge the camera’s static charge before inserting the flashcard
  • Avoid exposing the card to humidity, liquids, and dirt
  • Make several copies of your data and work off a copy
  • For more info, please visit lc-tech.com
  • To find more about video loss prevention or if you already lost your videos please visit here VIDEORECOVERY

Article source HERE

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Five Ways Businesses Lose Data and How they Should Prepare https://lc-tech.com/how-businesses-lose-data/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-businesses-lose-data Thu, 25 Feb 2021 14:10:44 +0000 https://lc-tech.com/?p=1727 Upwards of 70% of businesses have experienced or will experience data loss. Whether the cause is human error, fire, device failure or thieving hackers, businesses continue to be crippled by the damage. So what are the ways businesses lose data? Data loss comes with corresponding damages: time, money, and potential Read more…

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Upwards of 70% of businesses have experienced or will experience data loss. Whether the cause is human error, fire, device failure or thieving hackers, businesses continue to be crippled by the damage. So what are the ways businesses lose data?
Data loss comes with corresponding damages: time, money, and potential branding problems. Despite the risks, many business leaders aren’t aware of the types of common losses, are technically unprepared, and are unsure of the right remedies.
Here are five ways business lose data, along with proactive tips for prevention:

Human Error

Human error accounts for a substantial number of data breaches. People make mistakes, and there are many entry points for a loss. An employee with access to sensitive data might use a weak password, or they might have a thumb drive containing patented trade secrets that they lose in an Uber.

Employees may leave a company and take confidential data with them. This could be a benign case where the employee wants to stay in touch with internal contacts or keep work samples. It could also be unknowingly obtaining trade secrets, partner information, sales figures, or other data. Companies must prevent such instances through employee monitoring systems and the segregation of sensitive data from most employees. They could lose critical data forever, or worse, place it in the wrong hands.

Corruption

Data corruption is a lesser-known but devastating way to lose data. To prevent such occurrences, it’s recommended to replace in-house storage with newer servers and add multiple cloud-based backups. Cloud storage is inexpensive, and running multiple clouds with different providers practically eliminates many data loss risks.

On a smaller scale, companies might lose valuable image-based content due to corrupted SD cards. If an employee uses a high-end camera to document a tradeshow or a product, then the images are valuable data. Employees should keep SD cards clean and dry and quickly move photos off the card onto the cloud in order to prevent accidental loss.

Hardware Malfunction

Hardware failures are especially prevalent at smaller businesses that do not implement automated backups. Employees are more likely to utilize their own machines or external hard drives as storage containers, which exposes them to potential loss because of a lack of a streamlined and company-approved backup plan.

Portable flash drives are still used by remote workers, sales staff and others that are frequently on the road. They are convenient and fairly durable, but they’re easily lost. Cell phones are another vector for data loss, as employees use their phones to connect to company files, access proprietary systems and engage in other tasks that historically required a laptop or desktop computer. The prescription for preventing hardware issues is to purchase updated and sound equipment and to implement strict rules on moving data from the corporate servers to portable devices. Additionally, any data held on phones or personal computers should be auto synced to the cloud as often as possible

Unforeseen Events

Damage from natural disasters can not only destroy physical office equipment – it’s also damaging to on-site data. A flood will destroy laptops, SD cards and other devices along with on-premises servers holding valuable company data. Take steps to manage these risks by implementing offsite backups. Duplicating content to external hard drives is a way to back up data, but it still means all the data is locally held. Again, creating additional backups on the cloud is the best way to remove the risks from natural disasters.

Incorporate the risks of data loss into your disaster recovery plan. Look at the physical and virtual locations of your data and then review how susceptible they are to loss from fire, floods or other events. Do this proactively, instead of two days before a hurricane hits, otherwise there’s a risk in missing important data or taking shortcuts.

Ransomware and Theft

According to the 2019 Official Annual Cybercrime Report (ACR), businesses fall for ransomware attacks every 14 seconds. That statistic points to more than just the frequency of attacks, but also their obvious effectiveness. Ransomware is especially damaging because the thieves will usually encrypt the data and hold the key as the actual ransom. And these criminals often leak data when ransoms aren’t paid, or they’ll find ways to leave it encrypted and essentially worthless. Firms should carefully review their intrusion detection systems (and increase their backup frequency) so they can thwart ransomware schemes.  

The many ways businesses lose data are not always preventable. You cannot control every employee’s actions. Fires and earthquakes are going to occur. What is preventable is the permanent loss of the actual data. Through proactive planning, companies can train employees on best practices, avoid hardware and software issues and implement cloud backups and on-premises storage strategies.

Conducting stress tests and “dry runs” are essential parts of data loss prevention. The dry run should cover the “what if” of data loss. What would your company do if a significant portion of data was lost? Run through this exercise to find gaps in your data storage processes. Consider all types of losses, whether it’s failure by a single cloud provider, a fire affecting your on-premises storage or theft of multiple company laptops. Going through this exercise is worth the company time because it’s preventative maintenance. You’re spotting and fixing problems with minimal effort and expense, which compares very well to the expensive risk of losing your business’ critical data.

If you want to know more about ways how businesses lose data, read our other articles here.

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Warning Signs of Hard Drive Failure https://lc-tech.com/signs-of-hard-drive-failure/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=signs-of-hard-drive-failure Wed, 20 Jan 2021 14:56:53 +0000 https://542c67bc53.nxcli.net/?p=278 What Are The Warning Signs of Hard Drive Failure? While you may be able to repair software errors caused by bad sectors and in some cases, you may be able to repair the bad sectors themselves, if your drive has begun to fail mechanically nothing will stop the process. Know Read more…

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What Are The Warning Signs of Hard Drive Failure?

While you may be able to repair software errors caused by bad sectors and in some cases, you may be able to repair the bad sectors themselves, if your drive has begun to fail mechanically nothing will stop the process. Know the warning signs of hard drive failure to help prevent disaster.
So, what are the warning signs of hard drive failure?

The key is to detect the imminent failure of your drives before they give out on you and data is lost.
Let’s look at some common warning signs of impending hard drive failure:

  • Frequent but irregular crashes, especially while booting up Windows®
  • Frequent and cryptic error messages while performing typical activities like moving files
  • Folder and file names that have been scrambled and changed
  • Disappearing files and folders
  • Really long wait times to access folders and files
  • The hard disk is silent for a long period after you request data by opening a file or folder
  • Garbled output from open files or printing
  • The hard drive grinds away constantly because of noisy bearings

Sound can be an excellent indicator of disk trouble!
* If you previously didn’t hear a peep from your hard drive, but now you do… Check it.
* If it seems much louder than usual or makes occasional clicks or grinding sounds, check it ASAP and be prepared to back up your data and replace the drive.

* If your drive is making regular clicking or grinding sounds, chances are you have a mechanical failure within the drive.
* Turn off your computer as soon as possible as continued use may damage the platters (data storage area) and make your data unrecoverable.
The longer the drive is powered on, the more damage you may be doing to your data.
* You should then make a note of what happened and contact LC Technology immediately.
LC Technology offers hard drive data recovery services. If the data is recoverable, we can get it back.

Click this button to find out more.

S.M.A.R.T: What it is and what it does

Data recovery on a failed hard drive can be difficult and expensive. The good news is that modern hard drives have S.M.A.R.T (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) built in. This capability is standard on all modern hard drives and provides each device with a degree of internal status monitoring.

The S.M.A.R.T monitoring system built into your computer’s BIOS is rudimentary, only capable of telling you whether or not the drive is ‘OK’ at boot time based on the conclusion of its internal S.M.A.R.T diagnostics. This can make the difference between getting the data off the drive or losing the data when the drive crashes.

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