David, as everyone on Link will surely agree, your kind Link response is 
certainly thought-provoking, quite likely helpful and indeed well-considered.

Must admit, we were also having reservations regarding joining One Drive now, 
after the fact, and for exactly the reasons you also have. Linking any of our 
files they may have with a new membership?

Now, having spent time looking at the damage, turns out many of our obviously 
graphics named/labelled hard-drive directories (both video and still) have lost 
most/all their files. In other words, it looks as if specific targeting was 
employed. Some directories even contain a few newly placed files, often with 
odd file-names.

So, we now agree that targeted hacking is sounding more and more likely. 
Strange though, being very careful, it’s our first ever somewhat obvious 
hack-attack, if it is. Why us?

As per your suggestions, we will certainly follow through and will keep Link 
informed. As always, all Link opinion is much appreciated, and truly, thank you 
David 😊


From: David<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, 17 August 2023 9:56 AM
To: Stephen Loosley<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; Karl 
Auer<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [LINK] Microsoft One Drive

On 16/08/2023 17:27, Stephen Loosley wrote:

Sigh .. this morning one wakes up to 80-90% and four or five years of our saved 
Text & Graphic files now GONE from our Windows laptop? Without a warning, and 
without either our knowledge, or permission, Windows have apparently moved (or 
hidden) our files onto One Drive?

Stephen, what exactly makes you think they've been moved to One-Drive?  If 
you're not registered for the service and this happened as a result of human 
error at Microsoft, it's probably happened to many people and I imagine it 
would be front-page news by now.

Whatever you do, creating a one-drive account might be risky and of doubtful 
value because your files (assuming that's where they've gone) may not be 
associated with the newly-created account; it's even possible some malicious 
actor is running a One-Drive porting fraud similar to the current mobile fraud.

Does Windows automatically create system backups similar to Snapper on Linux 
which you can fall back to??


Some of the missing files are professionally made and irreplacable. They’re 
professionally made and produced historic arial drone geographical records. We 
can’t loose them! So, looks like our next step is to create a One Drive 
Account, log into it, and see if they are there, I guess. Can’t think of what 
else we can readily do? But, don’t want Microsoft believing they’ve won!
Would they be of special (e.g. political) interest to any group?

I'd suggest contacting the Aust. Cyber Security Centre to see if they know 
anything.  It might also be worth 'phoning your ISP too to see if there was a 
sudden surge in network traffic, e.g. are you unexpectedly close to your 
download limit?

And I'd follow Karl's  suggestion to remove the hard-drive immediately and send 
it to an expert for investigation.  But don't turn it on!!

It's probably time to review your network security.  I haven't looked at this 
for some time, but I suspect most of the cheaper domestic "router / firewall" 
suppliers strike a compromise between high security and minimal support costs 
which leaves systems way too vulnerable.  Games, video-conferencing, WiFi 
network ports, Bluetooth, etc. etc... which are on by default are all potential 
entry points since many require asynchronous IP network connections initiated 
externally.  Older versions of Windows weren't much better IMHO.

On 16/08/2023 18:37, Karl Auer wrote:
Well - definitely look around on your locally connected drives first. One false 
drag-n-drop could be to blame. If you have a good idea how much free disk space 
you had yesterday, comparing it with how much you have today might give you a 
clue as to whether the files are really gone.
Oddly enough, something very similar happened to me recently, but I came to the 
conclusion the missing files had vanished because I'd been interrupted or lost 
track of where I was up to in a complicated bit of directory & user-account 
shuffling.  Recovering is tedious if the problem isn't recognised for some 
time, but possible!

Please tell us how it goes...

David Lochrin

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