Silicon Shecky

Infosec Practitioner

  • About
  • Categories
    • General
    • Computers
    • Software
    • Rants
    • Security
    • Internet/Music
    • Reviews
    • Microsoft
    • Hardware
    • Mobile Computing
  • Links
    • Infosec
      • Burbsec
      • Infosec Exchange Mastodon
      • Hacks4Pancakes Blog
      • Krebs On Security
      • Bleeping Computer
  • Archives

Connect

  • Bluesky
  • LinkedIn
  • Mastodon
  • RSS
  • Twitter

[footer_backtotop]

Copyright © 2026 ·Sixteen Nine Pro Theme · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress

More Thoughts about Backups

March 13, 2009 By Michael Kavka Leave a Comment

In a previous post I talked about Backup and Disaster Recovery (BDR for those playing scrabble at home) and my thoughts on it. Just so you know, my thoughts have not changed. I still feel a good BDR Plan helps a business become more profitable in the long run, mostly because of the continuity it can offer.

The big question I have is, what about costs? I have people look at me and blink at the monthly charge sometimes, and basically call me crazy. I know its a good service, I know what the value is on it, but what is the best way to convey that to clients?

Yes it seems a bit pricey, but when you think of Tape Backups, you should be getting new tapes every year, so there is cost there. If its SSD Removeable “tapes” then you are running into where to they get stored off site? Plus the amount of time it takes to do a restore from them, especially if it is a full system restore….

Wait maybe that is it. BDR plans should be thought of more as insurance policies rather than technology.  What are your thoughts?

Filed Under: Computers Tagged With: Backup, BDR, Insurance, Restore, SSD, System, Tapes

And now for something completely different

March 1, 2009 By Michael Kavka Leave a Comment

So after all is said and done there is still more to do.

You all should find some sort of Backup and Disaster Recovery plan for your clients. I’ve started to look at the one we offer at work and realize that it can be a life saver for any business.

Think about it, a good one will make sure that you are protected and can be back up and running in an emergency within 48 hours. Have only up to 48 hours of downtime is short as it is. Less business lost, less downtime, quicker recovery for the business. It should be a no brainer, which is why I’m surprised at how many businesses decide its not worth the money.

I guess we can’t win them all, even when we try to be proactive.

Filed Under: Computers Tagged With: Backup, BDR, Compters, Disaster, Recover, Servers, SMB

RSS Taggart Institute Intel Feed

  • Exposed MongoDB instances still targeted in data extortion attacks February 1, 2026 Bill Toulas
  • New Apple privacy feature limits location tracking on iPhones, iPads February 1, 2026 Sergiu Gatlan
  • AI security startup CEO posts a job. Deepfake candidate applies, inner turmoil ensues. February 1, 2026 Jessica Lyons
  • OpenAI says you can trust ChatGPT answers, as it kicks off ads rollout preparation February 1, 2026 Mayank Parmar
  • OpenAI is retiring famous GPT-4o model, says GPT 5.2 is good enough February 1, 2026 Mayank Parmar
  • Exposed Moltbook Database Let Anyone Take Control of Any AI Agent on the Site February 1, 2026 Matthew Gault
  • America’s Best Chance to Transform Iran January 31, 2026 Ilan Goldenberg
  • Minnesota's effort to end the surge is rejected as journalists are arrested, but pushback continues January 31, 2026 Chris Geidner
  • RINA Accountants & Advisors is creating $400K settlement fund to settle lawsuit over 2022 data breach January 31, 2026 Dissent
  • Comcast agrees to $117.5 million settlement to resolve lawsuits over 2023 Citrix Bleed data breach January 31, 2026 Dissent

Browse by tags

Active Directory Android Antivirus Apple Beta Chrome Computers Exchange Exchange 2007 Firefox General Thoughts Google InfoSec Internet Explorer iOS iPad IT Linux Mac Malware Microsoft OS OSx Patches Rants SBS SBS 2008 Security Security Patches Server SMB Software Support Surface TechEd Tweets Ubuntu Verizon Virus Vista vulnerabilities Windows Windows 7 Windows 8 XP