It's pretty common knowledge. You don't need a serious amount of space, for example ECC RAM uses one parity bit for 8 bits to fix one bit flip or report 2 bit flips. Also disks use checksums which require even less storage.
Your situation is likely happened because of bad RAM.
> Your situation is likely happened because of bad RAM.
I don't see how that could have happened, since the image wasn't ever written to. It should have been the same file on disk as the backup, since I hadn't touched it since backing up the file, but it wasn't.
> You don't need a serious amount of space, for example ECC RAM uses one parity bit for 8 bits to fix one bit flip or report 2 bit flips
The thing about parity is that for it to be useful in a data recovery scheme, you have to know what bit got flipped. That works for RAID of course, because you usually know which disk is bad and so when you replace it you can work out the missing bits using the parity disk, but I don't think it could work for an individual hard drive, since in general you don't know which bit flipped.
And the thing about checksums is that they can tell you if your data has become corrupt, but they can't be used to fix things behind the scenes.
Your situation is likely happened because of bad RAM.