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US Air Force Says It Recovered 100k Files from Corrupted Database

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As the investigation into what caused the recent corruption of an Air Force database continues, officials have announced that they have managed to recover 100,000 of the files that were stored on it.

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The database containing inspector general investigations dating back to 2004 crashed last month, and it was unclear whether or not any of the information stored on it would be recovered. 

Lockheed Martin, the defense firm that runs the database, had spent two weeks attempting to recover the corrupted data before they notified the Pentagon and the Air Force that the incident had even occurred.

On Wednesday, the Air Force released a short statement confirming that some of the files had been recovered. 

“Through extensive data recovery efforts over the weekend and this week, the Air Force has been able to regain access to the data in the Air Force Inspector General Automated Case Tracking System (ACTS),” the statement reads.

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Earlier in the day, Air Force Chief of Staff General Mark Welsh had confirmed that Lockheed Martin and Oracle, the two defense contractors that run the database, as well as the Air Force cyber and defense cyber crime teams were all working on the recovery effort.

“They’ve been working nonstop since they got called in here a few days ago,” Gen. Mark Welsh said at a Defense Writers Group breakfast, Defense One reported. 

“Hopefully, we’ll be able to get this data recovered and there won’t be a long-term impact, other than making sure we understand exactly what happened, how it happened and how we keep it from ever happening again.”

Ann Stefanek, an Air Force spokeswoman at the Pentagon, stated earlier in the week that they do not believe that the crash was intentional.

“[W]e’re doing our due diligence and checking out all avenues within the investigation to find out if there’s anything that we’re not aware of,” Stefanek told Defense One. “Right now, we don’t have any indication of that.”

Along with historical data and files, the database also contained everything for their current investigations.

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