She should have known this was coming after they fired her, she should have backed up copies and she should have deleted everything important from her work devices.
If it's anything every corporate environment I have worked in, her stuff is already backed up automatically, unless she had a specific local copy excluded from backup. Even then, I have worked in environments where the corp would pull full snapshot on a regular basis. I would assume she knows that any and everything that is on a corp device is fully exposed. I am sure she's made precautions to cover herself with offsite archival of key information.
As far as deleting, if it was on a corp device that touched the corp net, it's fair game and would have already been grabbed thru their standard backup process with typical backups and archivals.
She should have known this was coming after they fired her, she should have backed up copies and she should have deleted everything important from her work devices.
If it's anything every corporate environment I have worked in, her stuff is already backed up automatically, unless she had a specific local copy excluded from backup. Even then, I have worked in environments where the corp would pull full snapshot on a regular basis. I would assume she knows that any and everything that is on a corp device is fully exposed. I am sure she's made precautions to cover herself with offsite archival of key information.
As far as deleting, if it was on a corp device that touched the corp net, it's fair game and would have already been grabbed thru their standard backup process with typical backups and archivals.
This.
The network manager might've backed up a copy.