Does any expert know do all past emails and files and webpages ever visited stay on your invisible harddrive indefinitely or do they disappear after a few years
Errrr…. what's an invisible harddrive? Is this the result of an online translation engine?
If I understand your question (which I'm pretty sure I don't!) it isn't time based, it depends on the amount of data subsequently saved. You may be lucky and it's the next thing to get overwritten or it may take much longer!
Errrr…. what's an invisible harddrive? Is this the result of an online translation engine?
Lol I hope not… His profile says he's from Ireland…
Come on Chris, are you telling me that you have never heard of an invisible hard drive? and you call yourself an Investigator….
Hmm, perhaps he/she means to say the unallocated space on the drive??
@LarryD
maybe u can tell me what invisible hard drive is …
i'm not an investigator
i'm a newbie
I am told its the part of your hard drive that you cant see - only with software used by forensic detectives to retrieve emails etc for court cases.
Does anyone know about it
I am told its the part of your hard drive that you cant see - only with software used by forensic detectives to retrieve emails etc for court cases.
Does anyone know about it
Enter unallocated clusters into your search engine of choice and have a fun afternoon.
Thanks but what about msn conversations that I have never saved. Is the content stored on the 'invisible hard drive'
Thanks but what about msn conversations that I have never saved. Is the content stored on the 'invisible hard drive'
For your reference, the "Invisible hard drive" is more routinely referenced as unallocated space.
The answer to your question is maybe…you may find remnants is many areas; active space, slack space and unallocated. I would suggest you develop a keyword library and run these to carve out like strings of data. You'll likely get bits and pieces from pagefile.sys, hiberfile.sys, unallocated and a variety of other locations. There is no one place on a drive where you can just go to and get what you are looking for, unless they had enabled some form of logging. If you have it, NetAnalysis may prove to be helpful as well.
Good luck!