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Our Data Recovery
specialist will take several careful steps to identify and attempt to
retrieve possible Data that may exist on a subject computer system:
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Protects the subject
computer system
during the Recovery examination from any possible alteration, damage,
data corruption, or virus introduction.
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Discovers all files
on the subject system. This includes existing normal files, deleted
yet remaining files, hidden files, password-protected files, and
encrypted files.
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Recovers
all (or as much as possible) of discovered deleted files.
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Reveals
(to the extent possible) the contents of hidden files as well as
temporary or swap files used by both the application programs and
the operating system.
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Accesses
(if possible and if legally appropriate) the contents of protected
or encrypted files.
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Analyzes all possibly
relevant data
found in special (and typically inaccessible) areas of a disk. This
includes but is not limited to what is called 'unallocated' space on a
disk (currently unused, but possibly the repository of previous data
that is relevant evidence), as well as 'slack' space in a file (the
remnant area at the end of a file, in the last assigned disk cluster,
that is unused by current file data, but once again may be a possible
site for previously created and relevant evidence).
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Prints out an overall
analysis
of the subject computer system, as well as a listing of all possibly
relevant files and discovered file data. Further, provides an opinion
of the system layout, the file structures discovered, any discovered
data and authorship information, any attempts to hide, delete,
protect, encrypt information, and anything else that has been
discovered and appears to be relevant to the overall computer system
examination.
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