Originally Posted by
Catty1
OK.
I dealt with a client in April or May. During the job, I used a program to retrieve as many photos as possible from her HD.
Having to do that was due to an error on my part, but I did recover a couple of hundred photos, some of them the personal ones she wanted.
Last week - around July 1st - she contacted me because a guy in the IT department where she works had said he could 'get all her photos', for a crazy fee of course.
I don't happen to still have her old hard drive. How long do you hang on to such things, tech people? Should I still have it in case?
Thanks.
What did you do that required recovery software? Was there physical damage to the drive? Partition deleted? Formatted? LOW level formatted?
What was the original problem you were asked to address?
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ALL her data? That's a bit of a stretch to promise to a client. Data recovery can be easy or very difficult/impossible, depending on the circumstances.
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Data is ALWAYS the customers responsibility. Of course, you should always off to do a full backup of a drive before you perform any work, just do not do that for free. It's THEIR data and they are asking you to work on their machine. If they choose not to back up their data, that is not your fault.
As for hanging on the a old HDD... We usually just give it back to the customer. It is their property after all. We offer to destroy it if they want us too, but they rarely do.
Obviously, do the best you can and make the customer happy. But never cease to remind them that thier data is their responsibility and offer ways to help them protect it if they already do not. If you don't want to make yourself responsible for the backup, offer them things like Carbonite or other online backup solutions. Modem DPM solutions are the best, IMO, way to do plain data backups. Databases, Exchange Servers and other "all the time live" things require other solutions. But, IIRC, you work with mostly home users. So Carbonite, etc, should be just dandy.
"Unlike most of you, I am not a nut."
- Homer Simpson
"If the enemy opens the door, you must race in."
- Sun Tzu - Art of War
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