Lars Noodén via Gnupg-users wrote:
A removable hard drive might be an option, if the storage time is less
than a decade and there are decent storage conditions in regards to
chemicals, temperature, humidity, and so on.  Flash memory seems to lose
its charge rather quickly, measured in months.

Write-once optical media is my preferred means of long-term backup for nontrivial amounts of data, but this view about flash losing data in months is completely ridiculous. Typical data retention specs for flash memory are for decades. If losing data in mere months were acceptable, just about nothing would work, including the computer you use for email -- its firmware is almost certainly in flash and it is probably more than a few months old.

I have SD cards and USB sticks with data blocks last written many years ago and still readable. Granted, I have never used low-end no-name Chinesium storage, so that may have something to do with it, but flash memory is far more durable than a few months. Battery-backed SRAM typically has batteries that last longer than that; if flash only held data for months, it would never have been commercially viable for displacing said SRAM.


-- Jacob

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