Comment on How do you effectively backup your high (20+ TB) local NAS?
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 4 days agoYeah. It’s almost like I literally said that.
Which some people are ok with, but not what most of us would want.
Comment on How do you effectively backup your high (20+ TB) local NAS?
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 4 days agoYeah. It’s almost like I literally said that.
Which some people are ok with, but not what most of us would want.
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 4 days ago
Strongly disagree.
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 4 days ago
With what?
That self hosting admins on lemmy probably care about their backups not being accessible to third parties?
I don’t think you can claim that they wouldn’t.
You can claim that YOU don’t mind. But that’s a sample size of one.
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 4 days ago
Define “accessible” here. They’re encrypted ……
MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz 4 days ago
…
Sure they can. How else do they enable providing access to the content without the user password?
The data is secured against unauthorized access, but unlike zero-knowledge setups where the chain of custody is fully within user control, the user is not the only one authorized. And even if you are supposed to be, you cannot ensure that you actually are.
OF-FUCKING-COURSE the physical drives are encrypted. That’s how you prevent unauthorized physical access.
But encryption is not some kind of magic thing that just automatically means anyone who shouldn’t have access to the data, don’t.
For that to actually be the case, you need solid opsec and known chain of custody. Ways of doing things that means the data stays encrypted end-to-end.
The personal backup plan doesn’t have that.