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Jasp3r | 2 years ago

They lost customer data, not source code. You shouldn't have a local copy of all user data on your machine.

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appplication|2 years ago

But my customers enjoy the personal touch of me manually editing their SSN in my local MS Access database.

taneq|2 years ago

I mean, after all, if you don't have your own copy of the MS Access database then when your team scales beyond about 5 people that database is going to get harder to access. So really everyone should have a copy of all important PII. :P

pixl97|2 years ago

If something is on the cloud does 3-2-1 backup stop applying?

drewzero1|2 years ago

Only if you're willing to stake your company's digital existence on the reliability of another company's cloud service.

If anything, it increases the need for 3-2-1 backups: the original copy of all of your files are on somebody else's computer that you have no control over. Hopefully they're keeping it backed up, and hopefully they don't go belly up and pull the plug all of a sudden. So you can use a primary backup in another cloud service from another company that hopefully won't kill their product at the same time as the other one (again, you have very little knowledge or control of the way they run their data center). Ultimately, it's a good idea to have a copy of your data that you have control over, maybe in a big drive (or set of drives, tapes, etc) in the safe, rotated daily/weekly/however long your company can cope with losing in a major SHTF situation.

Excessive? Maybe. For what it's worth my shop is locally hosted with both local and cloud backups. I have never regretted having at least one backup of anything and it's saved my bacon (or my coworkers', boss', etc.) a number of times. I've been fortunate to never need to rely on a secondary backup, but I sure wouldn't bet the company on it.

hawski|2 years ago

I would also like to know the answer. Would it be a good idea for the company to keep _encrypted_ backups on their machines/HDDs? Not a laptop somewhere, but something just a bit more involved.

tehlike|2 years ago

You can still do off-site backup to another cloud.

BossingAround|2 years ago

Ah that makes more sense, I can't read. I thought that the project stopped working all together, hence the startup was finished. I didn't realize it meant that they simply lost enough customers to go under.

halostatue|2 years ago

A company's source code is mostly valueless. A company's customer data is priceless.

As Fred Brooks said in Mythical Man-Month: Show me your flowcharts and conceal your tables, and I shall continue to be mystified. Show me your tables, and I won’t usually need your flowcharts; they’ll be obvious.