Data Recovery Specialist

Independent Technology Service Inc.

Virus Information


About Viruses




A virus is a piece of software designed and written to adversely affect your computer by altering the way it works without your knowledge or permission. In more technical terms, a virus is a segment of program code that implants itself to one of your executable files and spreads systematically from one file to another. Computer viruses do not spontaneously generate: They must be written and have a specific purpose. Usually a virus has two distinct functions:

1. Spreads itself from one file to another without your input or knowledge. Technically, this is known as self-replication and propagation.

2. Implements the symptom or damage planned by the perpetrator. This could include erasing a disk, corrupting your programs or just creating havoc on your computer. Technically, this is known as the virus payload which can be benign or malignant at the whim of the virus creator.

A benign virus is one that is designed to do no real damage to your computer. For example, a virus that conceals itself until some predetermined date or time and then does nothing more than display some sort of message is considered benign.

A malignant virus is one that attempts to inflict malicious damage to your computer, although the damage may not be intentional. There are a significant number of viruses that cause damage due to poor programming and outright bugs in the viral code. A malicious virus might alter one or more of your programs so that it does not work as it should. The infected program might terminate abnormally, write incorrect information into your documents. Or, the virus might alter the directory information on one of your system area. This might prevent the partition from mounting, or you might not be able to launch one or more programs, or programs might not be able to locate the documents you want to open.

Some of the viruses identified are benign; however, a high percentage of them are very malignant. Some of the more malignant viruses will erase your entire hard disk, or delete files.

It is not overstating the case to say that viruses could interrupt the free flow of information that has been built up by the personal computing in the last 10 years. Indeed, the prevalence of viruses has ushered in a new era of safe computer to the point where those that ignore the guidelines run grave risks. Considering the extreme warnings of danger--and the incidents already on record--it is a mystery that there are those in the computing industry who claim news reports of viruses are exaggerated.

The National Center for Computer Crime Data in Los Angeles estimates that American business have lost as much as $2 billion from unauthorized access to computers yearly. The amount of lost time may be incalculable.

As an indication of the severity of the problem, the federal government has helped to form a virus SWAT team called the Computer Emergency Response Team. Its job is to investigate security threats in major computer networks across the country. The Software Publishers Association has also adopted certain measures to address the problem.

Furthermore, in the last year many Fortune-listed companies have begun to establish computer policies to deal with viruses. In many cases those new procedures will set practices for testing in all software before it is put on a network and restrict the downloading of software from electronic bulletin boards. Literally no one who uses computers--not the government nor the police nor even your local bank--is immune from computer viruses.

Suppose a space shuttle executed order from a virus-infected software program. Or an air traffic controller was given incorrect information from a fouled system. Or your company's financial records were suddenly eradicated or permanently altered.

These are not necessarily fantasies of impending doom. Thus far, computer viruses have hit a variety of systems, including Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, major universities, newspapers and large networks linking vast numbers of computers and huge volumes of information.

Hard Disk Drive Glossary

Data Recovery and Hard Disk Drive Glossary of Terms


DATA RECOVERY TERMS
Embedded servo or wedge servo is a type of servo configuration used on today's hard disk drives This is a major cause of catastrophic hard drive failure and one of the main reasons data may not be recoverable from a hard drive. Furthermore it is the very reason that disk drive platters cannot be removed and put into another hard drive.
Embedded servo systems embed the feedback signals for the read/write head positioner (usually a voice coil motor) inside gaps or wedges in the data tracks of the disk. These are sometimes referred to as servo markers. This setup allows the entire set of platters to be used, instead of having to reserve one or two surfaces for the servo's use (dedicated servo), which makes more space for data available on the drive. Embedded servo was originally developed in the 1970s, and started to appear on mass-market hard drives for personal computers in the late 1980s.
As with dedicated-servo drives, the control signals are written at the factory using a special device called a servo writer, and cannot usually be regenerated in the field. Hard Disk Drives with errors in the servo areas are considered to be badly damaged and the data is usually not recoverable from them.

Head Crash is a term used to refer to the R/W head or heads inside a hard drive touching or hitting the platters or disks. Normally when a hard drive is running the heads float a few microns above the media. A tiny particle of dirt or debris can cause the head to bounce against the media. When it does touch the media it makes marks or scratches on the surface when can cause data loss depending upon how severe the head crash is. Following a head crash, particles of material scraped free of the drive surface greatly increase the chances of further head crashes or damage to the platters. When a disk drive starts making unusual sounds it should be turned off immediately. Continued running of a disk drive suffering from a head crash will only cause further damage. A hard drive should never be opened up outside of a clean room.

Laptop Data Recovery

Laptop Hard Drive Data Recovery Information


If you own a laptop computer, you need to rely on it to perform every single day and night and in every situation. You can't afford to have it go down. When it does and you need your valuable data recovered then ITS - Data Recovery will recover your lost data. Over the years, we have recovered data from just about every type of laptop or notebook hard drive ever produced. Back in 1987 we were recovering data from 20mb laptop hard drives. Like the Connor CP321 that was in the firstToshiba laptop computer. Today we routinely recover data from laptop or notebook hard disk drives ranging in size from 20mb. to 250gb. 

So whether whether your hard drive just quit or you've accidentally spilled a soda on your laptop, dropped it, or it's suffered from a natural disaster such as fire or water damage - don't worry. ITS - Data Recovery will get your data back!

Desktop Data Recovery

Desktop Hard Disk Disk Data Recovery Services & Information


Data Recovery has been performing Data Recovery on desktop hard disk drives for over 28 years. We have recovered data from just about every type of hard disk drive ever produced. We started back in 1980 recovering data from a 10MB MFM Tandon Tm502 that was attached to a Radio Shack Model one. Today we routinely recover data from all desktop hard drives ranging in size from 10MB to 1TB. This includes IDE, SATA, SCSI, SAS, ESDI and MFM hard drives.

WHY US?
Everyone faces a data loss situation at one time or another. When it happens, you can count on ITS - Data Recovery to solve the problem and get your data back quick. When you call on us to successfully recover your data, you can be rest assured that we will get it right the first time. Our ability to recover data from desktop hard drives far surpasses most data recovery companies. The reason? We've been around since 1980 and have seen it all. Our accumulated knowledge base of technical information and vast inventory of hard drives gives our engineers a great advantage in completing a successful data recovery. O and did we mention price yet?
 

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