I have to methods. For the office my secretary carries a MTWTF usb disk with her in her purse. Every day she takes yesterday's and plugs in today.
For the servers we use GCP. AWS probably has something similar the server access user only has permissions to write. You have to log in Manila via the gcp console to delete with different user permissions. It is so cheap we just let them Auto delete after 60 days. No idea if that is best practice or not. I like what others have said as well. On Fri, Oct 9, 2020, 3:46 PM <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote: > Air gapped remote. I know one company that physically unplugs a drive and > sets it on the shelf every day rotating them with 6 others. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Nate Burke > Sent: Friday, October 9, 2020 2:04 PM > To: Animal Farm > Subject: [AFMUG] Backup Solutions > > Hearing more and more about all the ransom-ware attacks, what is the > best method these days to do pc/server backups. Just backing up to a > remote storage disk isn't enough anymore, since as long as it's > connectable from the machine, it can get locked too. I only have a > couple Standalone ESXi servers, and a handful of physical machines. > Probably <10tb max across everything. One of the cloud providers like > Backblaze would be the simplest, start the software and just let it > run. Is there a local NAS that would do something similar without > breaking the bank, or taking hours to configure? Just curios what the > new 'best practice' backup policy is. > > -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com > > > -- > AF mailing list > AF@af.afmug.com > http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com >
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