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by Arn_Thor
2844 days ago
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I enjoyed google, and used docs and sheets for budgeting and planning. Then one day it was all gone. I'd had two google accounts, one created a decade ago on YouTube and later connected to my gmail-google account. I used the same login for both, and could switch between them without problem. I had used my Youtube-persona for most of my google docs work. That was all fine until suddenly I could only access docs from my other gmail-persona. They had without warning or reason changed either the account type or the app permissions for my account type. Not a word of warning, or even a message. There's no reverting it, no one at Google has been able to undo the change or recover my documents. NEVER AGAIN will I trust any important information to any cloud company. That was the day I started to take everything off the cloud and access it through a NAS at home (with off-site backup of course). I've never slept better |
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People think of backups as a way to protect themselves against hardware failure, but that's a reductive view; their purpose is to protect against systems failure, and a company is a single system. Sure they have their backups, but as you experienced, from the outside this is irrelevant - the system can fail as a whole, and therefore should be treated as a single copy.
Following the 3-2-1 rule, that might mean creating a second Google account with which you share all documents, and some process for backing up to outside Google (even if it's a regular manual use of Takeout).
Using a cloud service that can't be backed up is no different than trusting an hard drive not to fail.