|
|
|
|
|
by crazygringo
938 days ago
|
|
> Why were these features introduced in the first place if not to provide some of the features that backups have traditionally been used for? The key word being "some", not "all". Yes, file versioning means you don't have to go back to clunky backups to restore an older version. But it does absolutely nothing for data loss, which has always been the primary purpose of a backup. Accessing older file versions has only ever been a secondary purpose. |
|
Overwrites and deletes should largely be covered by versioning and soft deletes.
Data loss caused by failing or lost hardware should be covered by a business relationship with a data storage service provider.
This service provider role is what's new and different when we're talking about cloud storage. And this is why I reject a direct comparison with traditional backup systems.
Yes you're right, the data should have been backed up to protect against data loss. But why is it the user's job to do that rather than Google's?
I think users should be able to have a reasonable expectation that their backup needs are covered by using a cloud storage service with versioning and soft deletes.
The fact that this expectation isn't met borders on false advertising.