Top 10 data loss disasters
Never ship your drives in dirty socks
Computerworld Australia - Some disaster stories about data loss are more colorful than others, but here are some of the best for 2006.
Compiled from a global poll undertaken by data recovery services company, Ontrack Data Recovery Inc. in Eden Prarie, Minn., it is a top 10 list of the more memorable disasters.
10. Helicopter High Jinks -- Employees of a global telecommunications company dropped a laptop computer while working from a helicopter in Monaco. Incredibly, the files were retrieved and sent through an FTP server for a meeting in Hong Kong the very next day.
9. Wash the Data Away -- On a flight from London to Warsaw, a passenger packed his laptop and toiletries in the same bag. Unfortunately, his shampoo leaked and flooded everything in the bag, including the laptop, causing the hard drive to fail.
8. Not a Jolly Occasion -- British comedian Dom Joly, presenter and co-creator of Trigger Happy TV, dropped his laptop, damaging a hard drive that held 5,000 photos, 6,000 songs, half a book he was writing and all of his old newspaper columns.
7. Rescuing the Research -- A leading U.K. research university suffered a catastrophic data loss after a fire broke out in the computer science department on a weekend morning, damaging computer equipment with smoke and water from the fire department's efforts. Despite the fire, 30 computers were rescued and more than a terabyte of data recovered.
6. Beware of Bananas -- A customer left an old banana on the top of his external hard drive, and it proceeded to seep its contents into the drive, ruining the circuitry. The drive would no longer run, but the circuit board was eventually repaired.
5. Hard Drive Speed Bump -- It happens every year, but people continue to leave computers and hard drives in the path of moving vehicles. This year alone, Ontrack recovered from a laptop that was run over by a "people mover" at the airport, and several external hard drives stuffed in a backpack that was backed over by a truck.
4. Tenth Time's the Charm -- A man reformatted his hard drive not once, not twice, but 10 times before he realized there was some valuable information he needed recovered.
3. Finding Nemo -- A customer returned from the vacation of a lifetime in Barbados to discover that he couldn't access any of the snorkeling photos he took on his new "waterproof" digital camera. It seems the camera wasn't as waterproof as advertised.
2. Squeaky Drive Gets the Grease -- A university professor heard a squeaking noise from the drive of his new desktop computer. To solve the annoying problem, he opened the case and sprayed the inside of the drive with WD-40. Although successful in stopping the drive from squeaking, his actions also prevented the drive from booting up.
And finally, the No. 1 most remarkable data disaster of 2006:
1. Sock it to Me 1- Although the circumstances of the original data loss were unremarkable, the problem was intensified when the customer shipped his drive to Ontrack in a pair of dirty socks. The old socks didn't provide the necessary protection during shipping and the resulting damage made the recovery more challenging than normal. Next time, he'll stick with bubble wrap. A rather stinky affair indeed.



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Datacenter Consolidation Best Practices Whitepaper
- The benefits of storage consolidation are being realized by companies and seen as a way to streamline many storage-driven applications. Learn why the...
- Eliminating VMware / Storage Related Performance Challenges
- How to proactively monitor the performance in a Fibre Channel SAN / vSphere environment is always a concern. Understand the importance of a...
- Cloud Environments Have Familiar Storage Challenges
- Cloud environments have many storage challenges that are familiar to data center managers, but due to their density and abstraction, the issues become...
- Eight Considerations for Evaluating Disk-Based Backup Solutions
- In the past, the movement from tape- to disk-based backup has been less compelling due to the expense of storing backup data on...
- ExaGrid Helps U.S. Federal Government Agencies Reduce Backup Windows and Improve Data Protection
- The U.S. Government has been the largest user of tape-based backup systems since the 1970s. Most agencies have begun to deploy disk storage... All Storage White Papers
- Understand Your Data: The Future of Backup and Archiving
- Archiving and Backup are the foundation of the next generation of information governance. However, commodity data protection tools and basic archives are only...
- Optimizing Networks for the Cloud
- Join guest speaker, Rohit Mehra, IDC Director of Enterprise Communications Infrastructure, to explore current trends, discuss best practices for optimizing Data Center and...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 2: Designing and Deploying SQL Server on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn about the design considerations for virtualizing SQL workloads, performance and scalability information and high-availability options, as well as...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 1: Designing and Deploying Exchange 2010 on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and...
- Customer Spotlight: How IPC The Hospitalist Company Implemented Oracle on VMware
- Have you been looking to hear about customer's experiences with the new VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager product? View this webcast to learn... All Storage Webcasts