disaster recovery

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
disaster recovery
disaster planning

   <business> (DR) Planning and implementation of procedures and
   facilities for use when essential systems are not available
   for a period long enough to have a significant impact on the
   business, e.g. when the head office is blown up.

   Disasters include natural: fire, flood, lightning, hurricane;
   hardware: power failure, component failure, {head crash};
   software failure: {bugs}, resources; vandalism: arson,
   bombing, {cracking}, theft; data corruption or loss: human
   error, media failure; communications: computer network
   equipment, {network storm}, telephones; security: passwords
   compromised, {computer virus}; legal: change in legislation;
   personnel: unavailability of essential staff, industrial
   action.

   Companies need to plan for disaster: before: {risk analysis},
   preventive measures, training; during: how should staff and
   systems respond; after: recovery measures, post mortem
   analysis.

   Hardware can usually be replaced and is usually insured.
   Software and data needs to be backed up off site.  Alternative
   communication systems should be arranged in case of network
   failure or inaccessible premises, e.g. emergency telephone
   number, home working, alternative data center.

   (2007-06-20)
    

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