Another Personal Storage Discussion
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@zuphzuph Why back up a whole system image? Back up data, configs and (maybe) installers. 2FA is the sort of thing every public cloud account that handles sensitive data should have, however, that doesn't remove the need to encrypt the local/NAS copy.
It's also good practice to encrypt what you're putting into cloud storage (be that OneDrive or any backup solution, such as Backblaze, Glacier, etc). Your level of trust/care about being party to Yahoo-style mass surveillance will determine whether or not you want to take the minimal effort required to defend against that threat. (I take offence to rational concerns backed up by evidence called conspiracy theories, BTW. There are enough of those out there without vilifying legitimate threats.)
I should also point out that your ability to solve your own personal storage needs by basically saying "meh, **** it, I'll take the risk" re: backups is pretty rare. I personally have at least three non-phone devices, certainly wouldn't relish rebuilding them!
"Personal use" can also include spouse, children, etc. It doesn't take much for running a household's IT to become as complicated as running that of a small business. More pressing, perhaps, as the angry users know where you sleep.
Also..."just keep what you need in the cloud account" isn't enough for some things. That's okay for my music collection, but I'm going to want better redundancy that that for my home pictures and my tax returns.
3-2-1: Your data should be on three devices, on two different types of media with one of those copies being offsite.
If your data doesn't exist in at least two places, then it simply doesn't exist. Being in OneDrive/Dropbox/etc isn't good enough. Public cloud services have had failures and they have lost data. So if you want to use cloud as your primary storage location, make sure you back that cloud up to another, separate cloud.
Alternately, keep a local copy that is really, really unlikely to go pfffft at the same time the cloud copy has an oopsie. Given how awesome cheap NASes are at this stuff today, proper layered backups should be achievable for cheap, even for the home user.
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@cakeis_not_alie said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@zuphzuph Why back up a whole system image? Back up data, configs and (maybe) installers. 2FA is the sort of thing every public cloud account that handles sensitive data should have, however, that doesn't remove the need to encrypt the local/NAS copy.
It's also good practice to encrypt what you're putting into cloud storage (be that OneDrive or any backup solution, such as Backblaze, Glacier, etc). Your level of trust/care about being party to Yahoo-style mass surveillance will determine whether or not you want to take the minimal effort required to defend against that threat. (I take offence to rational concerns backed up by evidence called conspiracy theories, BTW. There are enough of those out there without vilifying legitimate threats.)
I should also point out that your ability to solve your own personal storage needs by basically saying "meh, **** it, I'll take the risk" re: backups is pretty rare. I personally have at least three non-phone devices, certainly wouldn't relish rebuilding them!
"Personal use" can also include spouse, children, etc. It doesn't take much for running a household's IT to become as complicated as running that of a small business. More pressing, perhaps, as the angry users know where you sleep.
Also..."just keep what you need in the cloud account" isn't enough for some things. That's okay for my music collection, but I'm going to want better redundancy that that for my home pictures and my tax returns.
3-2-1: Your data should be on three devices, on two different types of media with one of those copies being offsite.
If your data doesn't exist in at least two places, then it simply doesn't exist. Being in OneDrive/Dropbox/etc isn't good enough. Public cloud services have had failures and they have lost data. So if you want to use cloud as your primary storage location, make sure you back that cloud up to another, separate cloud.
Alternately, keep a local copy that is really, really unlikely to go pfffft at the same time the cloud copy has an oopsie. Given how awesome cheap NASes are at this stuff today, proper layered backups should be achievable for cheap, even for the home user.
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@zuphzuph don't be a dick. If you cannot handle participation, don't. Aside from your bitching, there was nothing bad in this conversation.
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@JaredBusch said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@zuphzuph don't be a dick. If you cannot handle participation, don't. Aside from your bitching, there was nothing bad in this conversation.
Contributed what I wanted to and nothing more.
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@JaredBusch said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@zuphzuph don't be a dick. If you cannot handle participation, don't. Aside from your bitching, there was nothing bad in this conversation.
I'm glad I brought at least one dick to this thread. @JaredBusch
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Really??? Grow up people.
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@Jason Maybe Tor is easy to track but what about OpenVPN or Proxy. If we combine these two technologies, you will obtain 99, 9 % privacy, security and anonymity while working on the Internet . There are many threats on the Internet and one needs a qualitative protection for his sensitive data. The good news is that there is a vast variety of technologies that are designed for protecting your network from all the threats. The bad news is that some of the technologies, like Tor, don’t include all the necessary functions for one’s secure network. That’s why sometimes it’s better to combine different technologies
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@Murtlap said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@Jason Maybe Tor is easy to track but what about OpenVPN or Proxy. If we combine these two technologies, you will obtain 99, 9 % privacy, security and anonymity while working on the Internet.
Eh? If you combine those technologies, the research has already been showing that you can loose your anonymity through TOR. You can have privacy and security without TOR, just with VPN.
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@Dashrender but not with a free one
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@Murtlap said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@Dashrender but not with a free one
I run my own from the VPS I use as a home lab. Not free exactly, but doesn't cost very much.
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@Murtlap said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@Dashrender but not with a free one
I'm confused - what's not a free one? VPN? If you find a free VPN, what wouldn't be secure/private about it? Being paid doesn't make it more or less secure/private.
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@Dashrender yes it was talking about free vpn. Here is main disadvantages:
usafe or no encryption protocols;
IPv6 DNS and/or WebRTC leaks;
inconvenient queuing during a server accessing;
access to a very limited number of servers;
bans on Torrenting and P2P sharing;
limited Linux platform support as well as limited devices support -
That stuff might all be true, but I guess we're off track because I'm not really sure what you're driving at, or how we got here.
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@Murtlap said in Another Personal Storage Discussion:
@Dashrender yes it was talking about free vpn. Here is main disadvantages:
usafe or no encryption protocols;
IPv6 DNS and/or WebRTC leaks;
inconvenient queuing during a server accessing;
access to a very limited number of servers;
bans on Torrenting and P2P sharing;
limited Linux platform support as well as limited devices supportI don't have any of those issues with some free VPNs.