disaster recovery - meaning and definition. What is disaster recovery
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What (who) is disaster recovery - definition


Disaster recovery         
  • A modular data center connected to the power grid at a utility substation
  • RPO]] and RTO.</small>
SET OF POLICIES, TOOLS AND PROCEDURES TO ENABLE THE RECOVERY OR CONTINUATION OF VITAL TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS FOLLOWING A NATURAL OR HUMAN-INDUCED DISASTER, FOCUSING ON THE IT OR TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS SUPPORTING CRITICAL BUSINESS FUNCTIONS
Disaster recovery (business); Recovery time objective; Offsiting; Disaster Recovery; Recovery point objective; IT service continuity; IT Service Continuity; Recovery Point Objective; Recovery Time Objective; Return to Operation; Recovery time actual; Recovery Time Actual; Resilience assurance
Disaster recovery involves a set of policies, tools, and procedures to enable the recovery or continuation of vital technology infrastructure and systems following a natural or human-induced disaster. Disaster recovery focuses on the information technology (IT) or technology systems supporting critical business functionsSystems and Operations Continuity: Disaster Recovery.
disaster recovery         
  • A modular data center connected to the power grid at a utility substation
  • RPO]] and RTO.</small>
SET OF POLICIES, TOOLS AND PROCEDURES TO ENABLE THE RECOVERY OR CONTINUATION OF VITAL TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE AND SYSTEMS FOLLOWING A NATURAL OR HUMAN-INDUCED DISASTER, FOCUSING ON THE IT OR TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS SUPPORTING CRITICAL BUSINESS FUNCTIONS
Disaster recovery (business); Recovery time objective; Offsiting; Disaster Recovery; Recovery point objective; IT service continuity; IT Service Continuity; Recovery Point Objective; Recovery Time Objective; Return to Operation; Recovery time actual; Recovery Time Actual; Resilience assurance
<business> (DR) Planning and implementation of procedures and facilities for use when essential systems are not available for a period long enough to have a significant impact on the business, e.g. when the head office is blown up. Disasters include natural: fire, flood, lightning, hurricane; hardware: power failure, component failure, head crash; software failure: bugs, resources; vandalism: arson, bombing, cracking, theft; data corruption or loss: human error, media failure; communications: computer network equipment, network storm, telephones; security: passwords compromised, computer virus; legal: change in legislation; personnel: unavailability of essential staff, industrial action. Companies need to plan for disaster: before: risk analysis, preventive measures, training; during: how should staff and systems respond; after: recovery measures, post mortem analysis. Hardware can usually be replaced and is usually insured. Software and data needs to be backed up off site. Alternative communication systems should be arranged in case of network failure or inaccessible premises, e.g. emergency telephone number, home working, alternative data center. (2007-06-20)
Disaster recovery and business continuity auditing         
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Given organizations' increasing dependency on information technology to run their operations, Business continuity planning covers the entire organization, and Disaster recovery focuses on IT.
Examples of use of disaster recovery
1. Jones, who heads Louisiana‘s disaster recovery division.
2. Pryor, then the president of the Lower Manhattan Development Corp., knew disaster recovery.
3. My office is closed after issuing its disaster recovery plan to all employees.
4. It said a standby disaster recovery unit had failed to provide a back–up.
5. Of the 30 firms interviewed in the UAE, 37 per cent said they do not have a disaster recovery strategy in place, and 23 per cent do not having a remote disaster recovery site to replicate important data to.