Because of technical reasons, I do not see this happening. You can also revert to windows 7 on your machines to resolve these things fast.
Anniversary update also screwed me by turning fast boot back on, while I disabled it before. We work with these bays in our setup:
So before the job the SSD I used was still in the editing machine with other content on it. I moved that away to a HDD and formatted the SSD.
Then I turned the system off, got the ssd out of it and did the recording on it the next day.
Everything went fine and I did replay the recording at the location before I turned everything off, broke down and packed everything and took the SSD out of the bay to render the contents the next day.
Next day I did insert the SSD into the editing machine and switched it on, something I have done hundreds of times without trouble, but now fastboot was switched back on...
So when I got into windows, I fired up Premiere, made a new project on the same SSD, wanted to import the video and did see it was not there. Because of fastboot, windows loaded the contents of the SSD from the fastboot data without looking at the disk itself, so it appeared empty. When I wrote the premiere project to it, it wrote it's fastboot patition table to it, destroying my video file.
I immediately realised what happened, turned the system off and did connect the SSD to a USB drive dock to disable trim, made an image and tried to get my file back from that.
I could not get it back, even a professional data recovery company did not get it back. So I was screwed. And my backup recording which I always make? Well my backup recorder would not work at that job and the client had some challenge getting one speaker in from a remote location, so I decided to put my time into that and put the recorder back in it's case as I never needed it before anyway... I did look at the recorder days afterwards and it seems to have died, so no extra blame for me that way, other than that I could have copied the file to another disk before packing up, etc...
So lesson learned, bad luck never comes one way but most of the time it adds up. I can think up multiple "if's" that would have changed the scenario, but as I cannot get back in time that won't change anything. This won't happen to me again though, for the next coming years. I am going to buy myself a new backup recorder which hopefully does not die on the day I need it the first time ever, and I am even considering getting myself a backup-backup recorder. ;)
I am a little amazed how fast data is gone on a SSD though. On a platter I would for sure have recovered.