MUMBAI, India, Jan. 23 -- Intellectual Property India has published a patent application (202541117212 A) filed by Sabitha K; Aravind Sreesanth S; Hari Rama Krishnan J; Harish Kumar V S; and Jai Krishna P, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, on Nov. 26, 2025, for 'echo vault.'
Inventor(s) include Sabitha K; Aravind Sreesanth S; Hari Rama Krishnan J; Harish Kumar V S; and Jai Krishna P.
The application for the patent was published on Jan. 23, under issue no. 04/2026.
According to the abstract released by the Intellectual Property India: "In today's digital landscape, vast amounts of personal and professional data are stored across devices like computers, smartphones, and tablets. Accidental deletion, system crashes, and file corruption are frequent causes of data loss, often leaving users without access to critical information. Conventional recovery tools typically rely on an intact file system, which may not be available in damaged or formatted storage environments. Echo Vault introduces a smarter, more accessible solution by scanning raw device memory directly, bypassing the need for a functioning file system. Users can specify a file name or type, and Echo Vault automatically locates, extracts, and reconstructs the lost data. Designed for Linux and rooted Android platforms, it supports a wide range of file formats including images, videos, PDFs, and documents. The tool features a modular architecture with multiple scan modes-deleted file recovery, signature carving, and deep scan integration-alongside file validation to ensure usable output. Echo Vault bridges the gap between forensic-grade recovery and everyday usability, offering a powerful yet intuitive interface for both technical and non-technical users. Unlike traditional recovery tools that rely on predefined carving rules or rigid filesystem structures, Echo Vault introduces a dynamic, user-guided recovery interface that allows real-time filtering by filename fragments, file size, and date range - even during raw memory scans. This level of interactive control over low-level recovery is rarely seen in real-world tools, making Echo Vault uniquely adaptable to both forensic investigations and personal data rescue. Its ability to operate without mounting partitions or requiring metadata makes it especially effective in cases of severe corruption or partial formatting, where other tools fail silently or return unusable fragments."
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