The future of data storage might be ceramic glass that can last thousands of years

Skye Jacobs

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Staff
Forward-looking: As the world faces a data tsunami, with most information destined for long-term storage, one technology could offer a sustainable, low-maintenance alternative. Whether Cerabyte can deliver on its promise of millennia-long durability and ultra-low costs remains to be seen. Still, its boiling and baking tests have already raised the bar in the race for the future of data storage.

Cerabyte recently conducted an experiment that seemed more like a culinary exercise than a technology showcase. The German storage startup plunged a sliver of its archival glass storage into a kettle of boiling salt water, then roasted it in a pizza oven.

Despite enduring temperatures of 100°C in the kettle and 250°C in the oven, the storage medium emerged unscathed, with its data fully intact. This experiment – along with a similar live demonstration at the Open Compute Project Summit in Dublin – was not just a spectacle. It was Cerabyte's way of proving a bold claim: its storage media can withstand conditions that would destroy conventional data storage.

Founded in 2022, Cerabyte is on a mission to upend the world of digital archiving. The company's technology relies on an ultra-thin ceramic layer – just 50 to 100 atoms thick – applied to a glass substrate.

Using femtosecond lasers, data is etched into the ceramic in nanoscale holes. Each 9 cm² chip can store up to 1 GB of information per side, written at a rate of two million bits per laser pulse. Cerabyte claims the result is a medium as durable as ancient hieroglyphs, with a projected lifespan of 5,000 years or more.

The durability of glass is well known. Its resistance to aging, fire, water, radiation, and even electromagnetic pulses makes it a natural candidate for "cold storage." Cerabyte's tests – including boiling the media in salt water for days (long enough to corrode the kettle itself) and baking it at high heat – were designed to underscore this resilience.

While the company has not disclosed how the ceramic layer or its bond to the glass would fare under physical shock, the media's resistance to environmental hazards is clear.

Cerabyte's ambitions extend beyond durability. The startup aims to reduce the cost of archival storage to less than $1 per terabyte by 2030 – a target that could transform the economics of long-term data retention.

The company's roadmap includes glass slides and CeraTape, a tape format with exabyte-scale capacity designed to integrate with existing robotic library systems.

Cerabyte's demonstrations have drawn attention at industry events, where the ability to retrieve data after extreme stress tests has impressed observers.

Unlike other archival methods – magnetic tape, hard drives, or even optical discs, all of which degrade over decades – Cerabyte's ceramic-on-glass approach promises to eliminate the need for regular data migration or energy-hungry maintenance.

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Sooo... They invented Compact Disc again? Nice. But remember children, nothing will replace redundancy of the backup.
 
We don't need to hear about it again because it is likely the consumer will never be able to afford it.
It’s dirt cheap… literally… as glass and ceramic are made of dirt…

Other companies have investigated this as well - size and durability aren’t the issues… it’s speed… transferring data is VERY slow, making tape backups seem fast in comparison… but maybe they’ll fix that sometime soon?
 
Don't doubt that it could be the future of storage.

But lasting thousands of years? Sh'yeah right, how many times have we heard this before. I'll keep my 3-2-1 backup strategy thank you.

Besides, with the data density it can achieve if the $1/TB figure is even remotely realistic, I bet it will be funny when you scratch it (unless the media's standard form factor is enclosed).
 
It’s dirt cheap… literally… as glass and ceramic are made of dirt…

Other companies have investigated this as well - size and durability aren’t the issues… it’s speed… transferring data is VERY slow, making tape backups seem fast in comparison… but maybe they’ll fix that sometime soon?
The media is cheap, but I can guarantee the hardware that reads and writes the data isn't cheap.
 
Guys, it's not for consumer use. Maybe for the last link in a data archive process of what some company considers to be critical data.
 
Sounds like this is something intended to sit between DNA and online storage, maybe a technology that becomes "common" before DNA is (whatever "common" means in the context of storing information for thousands of years). I guess the main point of DNA is capacity as opposed to longevity (though I think there are error correction and other items which make DNA suitable for long duration storage), but it is so slow that it is impractical to store anything on it these days. This sounds like it is orders of magnitude faster.

To me, I think the real question is how does it fare in space or other extreme environments. How long it lasts is less interesting than what it can survive, since the latter means useful applications today.
 
Future archaeologists might stumble upon these glass chips and, instead of hieroglyphs, they’ll find 200 TB of cat videos and Reddit memes.
 
Don't doubt that it could be the future of storage.

But lasting thousands of years? Sh'yeah right, how many times have we heard this before. I'll keep my 3-2-1 backup strategy thank you.

Besides, with the data density it can achieve if the $1/TB figure is even remotely realistic, I bet it will be funny when you scratch it (unless the media's standard form factor is enclosed).
Honestly, clay tablets are super long lived. Until they're broken. So I could see one of these theoretically lasting thousands of years and still be able to be read, but the vast majority of them will have been broken long before then.
 
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