by aporia » Apr 17th, '09, 09:10
I can echo the data recovery aspect. Unless you were very unlucky, the disc probably hasn't had water inside it. Even if it has, it's not the end of the world.
One needs a clean room to dissemble discs, so don't bother trying it at home.
Basically, you can either plug your hard disk straight into the IDE (or SCSI?) interface cable of another PC, or use a IDE-to-USB connector. You will probably be able to get all your content back.
If not, there are plenty of data recovery companies that will do this for you. Worst case scenario is that it will cost more than £500, but if you have lots of photos, then you need to make that call. Bottom line: you'll get your data back.
However, one cautionary note. Assuming you have photos of your daughter as a baby. Are you sure you don't have any level one child porn on your device? Level one is strict liability and is defined as non-sexual photos of naked or semi-naked children. Eg, your kids in the bath, on the beach having their nappy changed. A photo of your eight year old dressed up as a fairy. Are you sure that no one has ever visited an adult site that has a photo of a seventeen-year-old on the banner (the UK police's Operation Ore used this) which is cached on your disc?
The data recovery companies have specific policies and procedures around offensive/pornographic material. As soon as an operator spots this stuff, they will follow procedure and escalate. No one will make a sensible decision and it'll be escalated again "just in case". Eventually it'll go to the police who will investigate "just in case", and they'll visit. If you admit to having the material, then they may be inclined to offer a caution which is a criminal conviction plus possibility of being on the sex offenders' register. All the actors in this Kafkeresque nonsense have an incentive to report and are targeted on numbers, not being sensible. Sounds rediculous, but this is what happens.
Bottom line: buy a DVD writer and an external hard disk. Make archive copies on DVD and operational copies on the external HDD. Keep the DVDs separate from anything that looks like a likely target for a thief. Don't encrypt anything unless you have a copy of the decryption application and operating system to run it on.
Last edited by
aporia on Apr 17th, '09, 09:28, edited 1 time in total.