The storage facility where employee documents were stored were not only composed of digital and virtual data. True that a lot of the hardware, software, and irreplaceable machinery was long since destroyed since the zombification virus first ran rampant, but that didn't stop some eployees from proofing their own personal hard copies from destruction.
Books, manuals, copies, faxes, printed documentation left unscathed was the irony of the "paperless age". Gambino's prestigious heads of command and science assured them that the data stored within the voluminous supercomputers and servers were backed up every night and then placed within several secret vaults, but when the staff in charge of maintenance of that data slowly began to disappear without a trace the data became left unattended, files got corrupt, and the vault itself was breached.
Not much is known what happened to the fragments of the data that was able to be salvaged. Little is known as to what purpose they serve to this day, but what was found intact were small, personal fireboxes. The personal safes of each employee that they kept often within their offices and cubicles survived and were sometimes confiscated by independent detectives, paid thugs, and the severely undermanned police force (another product of Gambino's vice-like grip upon the law of the land that went beyond his island).
Among those boxes were the letters of Diacrys...
The Letters from G-Corp.
Books, manuals, copies, faxes, printed documentation left unscathed was the irony of the "paperless age". Gambino's prestigious heads of command and science assured them that the data stored within the voluminous supercomputers and servers were backed up every night and then placed within several secret vaults, but when the staff in charge of maintenance of that data slowly began to disappear without a trace the data became left unattended, files got corrupt, and the vault itself was breached.
Not much is known what happened to the fragments of the data that was able to be salvaged. Little is known as to what purpose they serve to this day, but what was found intact were small, personal fireboxes. The personal safes of each employee that they kept often within their offices and cubicles survived and were sometimes confiscated by independent detectives, paid thugs, and the severely undermanned police force (another product of Gambino's vice-like grip upon the law of the land that went beyond his island).
Among those boxes were the letters of Diacrys...
The Letters from G-Corp.
