Posted on 04/14/2016 11:38:37 AM PDT by Red Badger
or rm -rf/OBAMA
let this be a lesson: coffee first, then bash
2. Keep if OFF except when storing something.
Wanna get away?
At least he didn’t type “Google” into Google, he could have taken down the entire Internet.
They are simply copies.
Sad but true. Another thing to keep in mind is the objective - recoverability. Backups are just part of the solution...not the objective.
Hardware is cheap but data is priceless. That is why I have multiple redundant backups.
First, all of my data is stored on a network array that automatically backs up all data as it is entered. If one of the drives in the array fails, I lose no data.
Second, every PC on my network has an extra hard drive and the network hard drive is automatically backed up to each of those drives at various times during the day. If multiple drives in my network array were to fail simultaneously, I would lose no more than a few hours of data and could be up and running immediately, using any one of my network PCs as a temporary server.
Third, I back up my network array to a removable hard drive every night (I have several) and I take the most recent one home with me each night. If my office burns down to the ground, I will lose no more than one day of data.
Fourth, every weekend I back up my most recent removable hard drive to my home network.
Finally, I have a cloud backup that also runs every night and encrypts and stores my data on a cloud drive account. If my entire city is wiped out all of my data is still stored somewhere else. I would never rely on a cloud drive as my primary backup (they are too slow to restore data from and are outside of my control), but it is a good last line of defense.
I wish they’d delete the internet and we could all get back to living our real lives ...
Gotta be quick! ;-)
lol that’s awful. They aren’t completely shielded since we can wipe them with a tape degausser. The ones not actively stored in the ADIC are kept in a huge safe.
Hopefully you’ll be OK until you carry them to the degausser.
My first company had (back a few decades) 1600 dpi and 6250 dpi tapes. They loaded up for a full disaster test in Colorado. Unfortunately, the Colorado drives would only take 6250 tapes and couldn’t read the older 1600 dpi tapes.
Oops.
You’re correct. Most “deletes” from an OS perspective simply delete the directory information. The file is logically deleted, but is still physically present on the disk. The data could possibly still be recovered. It won’t be cheap, but unless something else overwrites those sectors, it can be done.
WHoopsie!
When I work on something very sensitive, I never work alone. I always have my supervisor look over my shoulder. I press ENTER only when we both agree that this is the right thing to do.
Similarly, when my supervisor works on something sensitive, he calls me to look over his shoulder.
Those who do not learn from ~/.bash_history are doomed to repeat it.
AHA! You found the ROOT of the problem!......................
Wants to know? Hell she probably INVENTED IT!..........................
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