GeoCities was established in 1994 by David Bohnett and John Rezner as the Internet of Beverly Hills, becoming the largest online community at the time. Long before MySpace and Facebook, tens of millions of "self-families" have created personal pages in communities based on their chosen theme. These blocks were originally Web cameras in the real world of Los Angeles. One is a West Hollywood gays' protected area and the other is a luxury shopping district of Beverly Hills. But when GeoCities asks the user to add their own page to these topics, the virtual land begins. After a wonderful IPO, GeoCities was bought by Yahoo!. In 1999 more than $ 3 billion
Yahoo finally determined GeoCities to be outdated. In October 2009, 38 million major English sites will be deleted. Several groups of hacker protectionists are involved. Internet archives, archives and other volunteers keep tens of millions of pages. Artist Richard Vijgen creates an interactive visualization of 650 gigabyte GeoCities backup.
Users want soft deletion from recovering mistakenly deleted objects, recovering malicious or unauthorized deletion, and recovering intentionally deleted objects. Also, some users may need a "recycle bin" or "archive" feature that can separate active and inactive objects. One way to do that is soft deletion. To delete and restore data, you need end users with appropriate roles as well as ACL administrators and support staff.
• Recover deleted data files. Deleted files are files and directories that are restored after being deleted from the active data. Although some files are fully recovered and easily identifiable, in other cases only fragments of the file (ie fragments located in slack and unallocated data) may be recoverable. Factors that affect the possibility of deleting files are as follows. How to delete files, time after deletion, computer usage time, file deletion / destruction program usage etc
Restoring (deleting) data - this term refers to files and directories that are restored after being deleted from the active data. As mentioned earlier, once a file is deleted, that file is only marked as available in the overlay. If the new data does not cover the area occupied by previously deleted data, the computer forensic investigator can recover the deleted data. Due to the way the computer stores data, some files can be completely recovered and easily identified, but some other data are partial and are mere fragments of the original data maybe.
When data is deleted, what actually happens is not a real "delete". During this process the data is simply marked as deleted and the operating system needs more space so this part of the drive is written and used for storage. This makes data processing very fast, but unfortunately the data is not actually deleted. The final result is forensic data or data that is left on the drive and is marked as "deleted" but you can still recover for those who know what you are doing . This results in incredible anxiety because the data is recoverable, since the owner considers the data to be deleted instead of the data.