So You've Lost a $38 Billion File

Started by TehBorken, Mar 20 07 09:02

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TehBorken

Somebody is getting fired for this.....

Imagine you're reformatting a hard drive so you can do a clean install but then you realize that you also reformatted the back up hard drive. No problem. You reach for your back up tapes only to find out that the information on the tapes is also unreadable. Now imagine the information that is lost [a style="color: rgb(0, 0, 191);" href="vny!://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/20/america/NA-GEN-US-Lost-Data.php"]was worth $38 billion[/a]. This scenario is exactly what happened in July to the Alaska Department of Revenue.

From the article: 'Nine months worth of information concerning the yearly payout from the Alaska Permanent Fund was gone: some 800,000 electronic images that had been painstakingly scanned into the system months earlier, the 2006 paper applications that people had either mailed in or filed over the counter, and supporting documentation such as birth certificates and proof of residence.'

Using the 300 cardboard boxes containing all the information, staff worked overtime for several months to rescan everything at an additional cost of $200,000.  
The real trouble with reality is that there's no background music.