World Backup Day is here - is your data secure?

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World Backup Day: Data loss is every tech enthusiast's worst nightmare -- computer hardware is fallible, and you never know when your ten-year-old SSD or hard drive might kick the bucket. It could be due to a power surge, accidental damage, or even just the degradation that comes with old age, but drive failure will happen to almost all of us someday. When it does, what will you do?

You could always take your hardware to a data recovery expert and see what (if anything) they can extract, but in this case, it's better to be proactive instead of reactive. Performing frequent, system-wide backups of all your most important data is one way to accomplish that.

Unfortunately, backing up your sensitive photos, videos, and game saves can be a slow and tedious process. With the busy online lives many of us now lead, spending a few hours a week protecting our data isn't always practical.

Still, even the occasional backup is better than nothing, and today is the perfect time to put that thought into practice: it's World Backup Day, an unofficial holiday (founded in 2011) that encourages us all to take some time to safeguard our most important information. As our own Shawn Knight put it a few years ago, it's helpful to think of backups like financial emergency funds.

You hope you never need them, but when you do, they can "turn a major crisis into a minor inconvenience." So, let's say you agree with that sentiment and want to participate this year -- how would you even go about doing that?

Sadly, there's no one-size-fits-all solution. Backups are personal, and the ideal strategy will vary depending on your values and preferences. In short, though, there are both local and cloud storage options available to you, and they don't have to be complicated.

We won't list every strategy here, but I'll use my personal backup method as an example.

Since I care about the privacy of my data above all else, I avoid cloud storage solutions. Instead, I snagged two high-capacity, USB-based external drives from Amazon last year. Most of the time, they remain disconnected and stored in a safe location.

However, every other month or so, I plug them into my system and transfer any newly-accrued data over. It can be a lengthy, overnight process in some cases, but the peace of mind I get for doing it is always worth the hassle.

No matter what backup solution you choose, bear in mind that redundancy is a good thing. In my case, I have the same data copied across both external drives -- even if one fails, my data is protected on the other.

But that's enough out of us. Will you be participating in World Backup Day this year? If so, what does your backup strategy look like? Let us know in the comments.

Masthead credit: Nuttapol Pingpittayakun

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Newegg appears to be celebrating "National; Backup Day", by offering SSDs at almost blowout savings, which ends tonight, (Mar. 31, 2021) @ 12:00 PM PDT.

My "master plan" ATM, is to use my existing C:/ SSDs as "backups", migrating all my OSs to the new 870 drives with Samsung's excellent software.package.

I figure SSDs should be easier to store, in both size and much less susceptible to getting knocked around than the HDDs I have now..

My basic backup strategy includes simply copying entire HDDs, and installing them in separate machines, all of which are rarely to never connected to the interwebz
 
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I usually backed up data on my 2TB Adata shock proof drive, stored in a shockproof casing. 😛😁

But recently I bought an nVMe and an SSD drives, and moved all of my critical data on them.
 
I just use dropbox to hold all the stuff I'm working on. It appears just like a directory on my PC but is replicated to the cloud. I also have it replicated to all my laptops. It doesn't cost me anything. I can access the latest files from any device or from a web browser. It also doesn't matter if the house goes up in flames taking my laptops, PC and NAS with it as it would all still be on the cloud. It even has incremental backups so I can go back to a version from last Tuesday etc. I love it.

It could be improved by allowing you to ignore certain types of files in the transfer (log files, temp files, compiled exe's etc).
 
To be extra safe I backup everything to my C: drive! :D lol
This was not in my backup considerations!!! But all I have is a 5.25-inch 1.2MB floppy drive. I backup now to 1.2MB floppies. How many will I need? You say now! :joy:
 
This was not in my backup considerations!!! But all I have is a 5.25-inch 1.2MB floppy drive. I backup now to 1.2MB floppies. How many will I need? You say now! :joy:
Assuming a 1 TB HDD as C:/ then 1,000, X 1,000 X..8 floppies (give or take).
 
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