Or the computer repair shop made bit for bit copies of the hard drive and gave them to the FBI, law enforcement and Rudy Giuliani. A copy like that would have deleted files which would still be accessable with some extra work. They dunt need the physical laptop, only a perfect image of the drive.
He said bit for bit so yes, you can totally get files back still. As long as that free space is included in the backup, you can access it exactly as if you have the physical drive. We all learned this with the audits
What was taken to the repair shop to be repaired if the laptop does not exist? Perhaps its been destroyed or 'lost' but surely it existed at one time - the receipts and notifications (submitted as evidence in court) specify the serial number and make/model of the laptop.
With that understanding, you can clone a disk pretty easily with hardware devices that are specifically designed for this task. They arent rare or expensive to source, and repair shops are likely to have these + spare disks to use as the destination media.
Sure an icloud backup is possible and feasible, but that doesn't negate or disprove the device itself.
Or the computer repair shop made bit for bit copies of the hard drive and gave them to the FBI, law enforcement and Rudy Giuliani. A copy like that would have deleted files which would still be accessable with some extra work. They dunt need the physical laptop, only a perfect image of the drive.
He said bit for bit so yes, you can totally get files back still. As long as that free space is included in the backup, you can access it exactly as if you have the physical drive. We all learned this with the audits
Um, I was talking about the Colorado one where they only had a image of the drive. I donβt think you know what you are talking about.
What was taken to the repair shop to be repaired if the laptop does not exist? Perhaps its been destroyed or 'lost' but surely it existed at one time - the receipts and notifications (submitted as evidence in court) specify the serial number and make/model of the laptop.
With that understanding, you can clone a disk pretty easily with hardware devices that are specifically designed for this task. They arent rare or expensive to source, and repair shops are likely to have these + spare disks to use as the destination media.
Sure an icloud backup is possible and feasible, but that doesn't negate or disprove the device itself.
We know the guy from the repair shop cloned the hard drive before turning over to the Federal Bureau of Interference.
Yes that's what I've been thinking for a while