Internet Backup; Be Very careful who you deal with!
Posted on 14-06-2006The concept of internet based backup is not new; some time ago it was only
available to corporate institutions that had multiple locations, high
connectivity speeds and very high budgets. Today the cost of hardware and high
speed connectivity has greatly reduced. As a result the number of companies
offering backup to a remote location has greatly increased. For purposes of
conversation, we can call it jumping on the band wagon.
You may think the increased competition is good for the consumer, to an extent,
I agree, but not at the cost of cutting corners and jeopardising the security of
your data. We all know and agree a company’s data is its most important asset,
and to lose it or give access to your competition such an asset is never an
option. So please be careful where you store your data via the internet.
The general idea of backup via the internet is a good one. It has a very low
proportionate implementation cost and as the correct system should be completely
automated the cost of ownership is also very low as well. Unlike tape backup it
is also very scalable, you can start small and grow into larger solutions as and
when you require with zero disruption as long as you are with the right offsite
backup company in the first place.
In today’s data centric environment even smaller companies may have more than
one server, for example, a server for Microsoft Exchange/Lotus Notes, a server
for Microsoft SQL/Oracle/MySQL and potentially a file and print server, or maybe
a single server which carries out all tasks. Smaller companies may still use
older inherited Unix based or Novell based systems or may be considering
migrating to a lower cost Linux environment. What ever you currently use or what
you may use in the future your offsite backup solution will need to adapt.
Please check, whatever backup company you use, they are always developing their
products for the future, your companies future.
Getting data to an offsite location is the easy part, anybody can click and drag
to an ftp site, to optimise your backup and more importantly your recovery times
make sure your data is compressed locally or at source. The most important
element of any data transfer is security, make sure your data is encrypted
before it is transmitted and remains encrypted whilst in storage if this is the
case only your organisation will have access to your data.
In what environment is your data stored? There is no point just moving your most
important asset to another location, make sure it is totally safe, data should
only be backed up to a class 1 data centre with the highest security and safety
measures in place, hardware should be clustered so there is no single point of
failure within that data centre and for added security and peace of mind the
whole data centre and hardware within should be a replicated in real time to a
second location in preferably another country.
Imagine your local data backed up every night or when ever you wish to a secure
remote location in the UK and then replicated in real-time to a second data
centre in a different country.
Finally this whole process must be as efficient as possible. It must be totally
secure, fully automated ensuring your staff are focused on revenue generating
functions, it must support open files enabling you to backup regardless of what
your systems are doing and it must be capable of incremental backups, after all
there is no point re-transmitting a file which has not been accessed for a year.
So after reading this article I now hope it has made you think and understand
why the cheapest offsite backup solution is rarely the best.

Download here
Internet Backup; Be Very careful who you deal with! (pdf)
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