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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: October 23rd, 2023

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  • If you mean recover the data on it, a failed drive can only potentially be recovered by a professional facility. This is why you should have multiple backups, always.

    NAS drives are often the same drives as consumer. Sometimes they have more durable and quieter noise. Sometimes they use slightly different drive components/design. But realistically, most consumer 3.5-inch drives will work fine.

    If drives are expensive where you live, it’s best to pick an affordable non-NAS drive with a long warranty. The more expensive the drive, the more important warranty term matters… as you are experiencing.

    4TB SSDs are in the $200 USD range and have 5 year warranty now (in many regions/vendors). If you only need 6TB, you may want to go with SSD for more durability.


  • There’s no need to toss the drives at three years. Run drive diagnostics on them using a tool (GSmartControl, WinDLG, Hard Disk Sentinel, etc). Ideally every six months full scan, at least once per year.

    Drives easily can last ten years without issue, and the odds of all drives failing simultaneously is near-zero.

    Really you should keep at least one, ideally two, drives at different locations. And add an encrypted cloud backup to the mix.


  • Encryption doesn’t have a major drive impact. The data is effectively the same.

    Now, if you set a drive to maximum encryption, and encrypt all sectors - that’s basically going to force the drive to write to every sector. This will uncover any drive surface errors, and it’s basically the most stress test-y thing you can do to a drive. If there are bad sectors, you can bet pending reallocated sectors will go up.

    Again, that does not mean the drive has failed. Those bad sectors could have been there since the factory. 75 is a concern. But is not a failure.

    The fail alert is that you need to zero/erase all sectors, which will allow the drive to do a reallocation. When an erase bit is sent to the sector (by the OS/erase command), that’s when it will reallocate.









  • Cleared out my store’s three units.

    Pairing this with 8TB SATA SSD for disaster proof backups. After twenty years, getting all my data in one place…

    … Well, except the 20TB overflow. That backs up to my $279 20TB’s. Which hook into BackBlaze. They had better appreciate the loyalty. The 28TB backups sure cost them a lot.

    I’m just glad I don’t have more. Then I’d have to set up a NAS and, ugh, I’m just working too hard to enjoy doing that these days.

    Only hiccup so far is either my 8TB Samsung 870 QVO died or the enclosure, a whopping 30 minutes in. This is why I backup meticulously in (at least) three separate locales, plus encrypted cloud.





  • Legally, if they are hosting compromising things of any sort and don’t report you for it they are in big trouble. So expect that.

    That’s not true. What keeps Mega from being shutdown (like MegaUpload was previously), is that Mega is carefully following Australian and American laws - which do safe harbor cloud providers that host fully encrypted files.

    Now, if Mega receives a copyright infringement report that includes the decryption key… then they are obligated to investigate. This is why pirated files hosted on Mega with the keys posted pubicly, are so often taken down.

    It’s not that Mega is decrypting the files on the backend, it’s that content providers are searching for the keys and sending them to Mega when they find them.

    Apple considered decrypting iCloud Photos, despite no legal obligation to do so, because of political pressure. They backed down when consumer/EFF pressure changed the narrative.