Karen Grube
Senior Member
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2017
- Messages
- 21
- Thread Author
- #1
I had a problem with a Windows 10 update process a couple of months ago that caused a USB-connected external hard drive to be corrupted and inaccessible. I was actually accessing the drive (searching for a file) when a Windows 10 update forced me to "shutdown and update." The system ground to a screeching halt, and when that happens, I know it's Microsoft forcing me to do a Windows 10 update. When I hit the Windows button, I saw that I was right; Windows was forcing me to update. I believe the forced shutdown while I was accessing the drive is what corrupted it.
I have exhausted all of Microsoft's technical support avenues, and the drive is now sitting at the Microsoft Store in Fashion Valley (San Diego) waiting for someone to authorize sending the drive to Seagate for data recovery at no charge to me. There is absolutely nothing more the store or technical support can do at this point except assist me in recovering the data assuming it's recoverable. I just won't let Microsoft damage my little external hard drive (1 terabyte) and then make me pay to get my data back. That's just not right.
I have been trying for about six weeks to get through to someone at a higher level at Microsoft who can authorize the store to send the drive out for recovery, but Microsoft makes that nearly impossible. I've even faxed the complaint department several times. Microsoft doesn't seem to have an executive level customer relations department at all, and no one at the store, at the Answer Desk, or in tier three tech support has been helpful beyond telling me there's nothing more they can do and no one else they can refer me to.
Every single person I've spoken with about this has refused to escalate my request to anyone higher beyond the level of the store manager and a tech support supervisor, neither of which can authorize the data recovery at no charge to me. I find that outrageous and unacceptable. I've even had Microsoft technicians tell me the situation I described is certainly possible. It would be just absolutely too coincidental for the drive to have failed at just the moment Microsoft was forcing me to update. As soon as the update was complete, the system rebooted. When I tried to access the drive again, it wasn't recognized. It was listed in the Device Manager, but Disk Management couldn't initialize it for some reason. So, I was told to take it to the Store, and they've been of no help. They even told me the drive is no longer getting power, although it certainly did the day I brought it in since it showed up in the Device Manager and Disk Management, though it couldn't be "initialized."
Has anyone else had a similar issue with not being able to access an external rive immediately after an update? Please let me know what you think and if you have any suggestions.
I have exhausted all of Microsoft's technical support avenues, and the drive is now sitting at the Microsoft Store in Fashion Valley (San Diego) waiting for someone to authorize sending the drive to Seagate for data recovery at no charge to me. There is absolutely nothing more the store or technical support can do at this point except assist me in recovering the data assuming it's recoverable. I just won't let Microsoft damage my little external hard drive (1 terabyte) and then make me pay to get my data back. That's just not right.
I have been trying for about six weeks to get through to someone at a higher level at Microsoft who can authorize the store to send the drive out for recovery, but Microsoft makes that nearly impossible. I've even faxed the complaint department several times. Microsoft doesn't seem to have an executive level customer relations department at all, and no one at the store, at the Answer Desk, or in tier three tech support has been helpful beyond telling me there's nothing more they can do and no one else they can refer me to.
Every single person I've spoken with about this has refused to escalate my request to anyone higher beyond the level of the store manager and a tech support supervisor, neither of which can authorize the data recovery at no charge to me. I find that outrageous and unacceptable. I've even had Microsoft technicians tell me the situation I described is certainly possible. It would be just absolutely too coincidental for the drive to have failed at just the moment Microsoft was forcing me to update. As soon as the update was complete, the system rebooted. When I tried to access the drive again, it wasn't recognized. It was listed in the Device Manager, but Disk Management couldn't initialize it for some reason. So, I was told to take it to the Store, and they've been of no help. They even told me the drive is no longer getting power, although it certainly did the day I brought it in since it showed up in the Device Manager and Disk Management, though it couldn't be "initialized."
Has anyone else had a similar issue with not being able to access an external rive immediately after an update? Please let me know what you think and if you have any suggestions.
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More than 1 business I know of, has gone Bankrupt from having to pay to put in all new computers and a completely new computer network to support it.
From a professional standpoint then, you can maintain that you were taking "reasonable" backup precautions for any normal home user; that is having 1 external hard drive on which to store your Personal Data.
If Microsoft maintains you should have done more--I saw "pee-shaw", not likely!
This should bode in your favor in court or arbitration hearing I believe. Again, I'm not an Attorney as I keep repeating, but I have lots of experience with this stuff in over 1,500 companies I worked in that had me working on their computer stuff.

Neither of those places are reliable and used by professionals.
Recovery prices for dead drives can be from $200-$80k or more, of course the high end of the range are for business recovery not personal. Personal ranges from $200-$800 or so. I've never paid more than $800 for a personal data recovery. Last one I did was for a WD 750GB MyBook external drive similar to yours my son had. It had about 4 years of usage on it or so. That's when those start to fail usually. Drive was not spinning, and he had 10 years worth of his music library, photos, videos, and movies on there. Total cost through Geek Squad was $550. This price included shipping back his recovered files onto a brand new WD external HDD. According to him, we achieved about 97% recovery! I've seen even higher recovery rates than that on totally DEAD drives as well.
Once you do so, you can decide whether or not to try and sue Microsoft and recover whatever those recovery costs are. Make certain to document the entire process and of course keep any receipts for data recovery services you get from either of those companies should you decide to use them.
If this is a "showstopper" for you, then fine. If you brought your drive to me and I spent weeks working on it and could get nothing off of it; these are the only 2 companies that I have personal experience with who will get guaranteed results. If they can't get anything off your "dead drive" then no one can. 