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60% of Organizations Reported Data Loss With Oracle

Survey conducted by Kroll Ontrack

Six in 10 organizations reported experiencing at least one data loss from its Oracle business system, and 18 percent have had more than five losses in the past two years.

These are findings from a recent Oracle OpenWorld survey conducted by Kroll Ontrack Inc., provider of information management, data recovery and legal technologies products and services.

This survey yielded feedback from 733 IT professionals on Oracle system data loss frequency and remediation practices. Data loss can occur in any and every business system as a result of corruption, human error, or hardware or software failure.

However, when estimating the risk level associated with an inability to retain data from a lost Oracle database, 79 percent of organizations report "no risk or fair risk," which inevitably leads to an increased tendency to neglect data loss risk from Oracle database, log or backup corruption; Oracle ASM corruption; deleted Oracle databases, logs or backups; file system corruption; and RAID and other storage/server hardware failures. Further, 58 percent of organizations reported taking more than a business day of downtime to recover from their data loss.

"From critical customer database information to entire virtual environments, Oracle solutions store valuable business data," said Jeff Pederson, data recovery manager, Kroll Ontrack. "Given their pervasiveness among the world’s largest companies, it is imperative that downtime is minimal. Kroll Ontrack has proprietary techniques and the industry-leading Oracle recovery toolset designed to retrieve data from both hardware and virtual platforms."

Kroll Ontrack has tools to address loss from:

  • Oracle Databases: Kroll Ontrack has tools and techniques designed to retrieve the row data contained within missing or damaged database files. These techniques and toolsets address Oracle database, log or backup corruption; Oracle ASM corruption; deleted Oracle databases, logs or backups; file system corruption; and RAID and other storage/server hardware failures.
  • Oracle Linux: With its data recovery repair and recovery tools for Linux file systems including EXT3, EXT4, XFS, Reiser, JFS and GFS, Kroll Ontrack is unique in its abilities to recover data from systems running Oracle Linux. These solutions address file system or data corruption, LVM corruption, deleted or partially overwritten data and RAID and other storage/server hardware failures.
  • Oracle VM: Kroll Ontrack supports file formats including VHD, VDI and VMDK, which can be used by Oracle VM and Oracle VM VirtualBox, and has solutions to address guest and host file system corruption, deleted virtual machines and snapshots, internal virtual disk corruption, RAID and other storage/server hardware failures and deleted or corrupt files contained within the virtual disk.

"Our commitment to successfully addressing any and every type of data loss scenario, which is predominantly caused by human error or natural disasters, is evident in our extensive research and development with respect to this technology," said Pederson. "As a result, we’ve recently and successfully addressed Oracle situations with complex failed media, including SAN environments and all RAID types, Oracle row data from corrupt databases and remote data recovery of a virtual server containing an Oracle database."

Comments

Generally market reports are sponsored or done by storage companies for one and only one purpose: justify the need of what they are doing.

It's evident here for Kroll Ontrack, a specialist in data recovery, especially for Oracle databases. But this survey can be more credible than some other ones because it was realized among participants at the Oracle OpenWorld last month in San Francisco, CA, where Kroll Ontrack paid to be an exhibitor. It was conducted by Kroll Ontrack itself, not by an external market report's company paid to demonstrate the activity of its client and obviously pushing the final results in this direction.

Furthermore, the panel of 733 IT professionals is acceptable. It's strange that Oracle apparently didn't react to such results: 60% reported at least one data loss from their Oracle business system, and 18% have had more than five losses in the past two years, with 58% taking more than a business day of downtime to recover from their data loss!

That's bad news for miserable users of Oracle databases, software supposed to manage the most critical data of their organizations. And Oracle is largely the leader in this field with about 50% percent revenue share in front of IBM and then Microsoft and Sybase (acquired by SAP), not including open source MySQL.

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