Data Types

Courts recognize five categories of data which are discoverable in Federal courts. The pivotal case, Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, LLC, 217 F.R.D. 309, enunciated these categories of data. The first three types of data are considered accessible by the courts, whereas the last two are considered inaccessible.

Active, Online data is usually stored on magnetic discs, such as hard drives. Active data is data that is presently in use or is accessed frequently. It is the simplest data to obtain.

Near-line data that is stored using a robotic storage device, which employs robotic arms to access media. Optical discs are one example of near-line data.

Offline storage/archives are data that is stored in a removable form of media, such as a removable optical disc or magnetic tape, that can be stored on a shelf outside of the computer. Frequently, offline storage is used to make disaster copies or to store data that is not accessed often.

Backup tapes are devices that record data and write it onto tapes. Backup tapes have significant storage capacity of up to several gigabytes. Data is not organized by file, making recovery of documents from back up tapes both time-consuming and expensive.

When data is saved to a computer, it is stored in contiguous clusters. As each file is erased, those clusters become open space. As the remaining files grow, they can expand beyond the contiguous space available on the hard drive. When the files outgrow the space, they are broken up, or fragmented, and the fragments are placed randomly throughout the hard drive. Fragmented, erased or damaged data can only be accessed using computer forensics. Erased data is not truly deleted from the hard drive until the computer writes over the erased data.

For more definitions, please visit our Glossary of Terms page.

Bytes, Kilobytes and Gigabytes, OH MY!

The smallest unit of information on a computer is a bit, which is short for the term binary digit and can only consist of the numbers 0 or 1. Bits are used in various combinations of the numbers 0 and 1 to create meaningful information, such as a byte.

byte is a computer storage unit containing enough memory to hold a store a single character, such as a number or a letter. It is composed of eight bits.

Because bytes are a small unit, it is more common to see the terms kilobytes and gigabytes to refer to storage space on a computer.

Kilobyte: 1,024 bytes

Megabyte: 1,048,576 bytes or 1,024 kilobytes

Gigabyte: 1,073,741,824 bytes or 1,024 megabytes

It can be difficult to conceptualize the amount of electronic data contained in a byte.  Different documents take up varying amounts of space.

The following examples demonstrate the approximate quantities of data that can be stored in a single gigabyte of space:

Microsoft Word files: 65,000 pages

E-mail files: 100,000 files

Text files: 675,000 pages

For more definitions, please visit our Glossary of Terms page.

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