this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2023
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Data Hoarder
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We are digital librarians. Among us are represented the various reasons to keep data -- legal requirements, competitive requirements, uncertainty of permanence of cloud services, distaste for transmitting your data externally (e.g. government or corporate espionage), cultural and familial archivists, internet collapse preppers, and people who do it themselves so they're sure it's done right. Everyone has their reasons for curating the data they have decided to keep (either forever or For A Damn Long Time (tm) ). Along the way we have sought out like-minded individuals to exchange strategies, war stories, and cautionary tales of failures.
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Good backup software is going to have methods to verify that backed-up data is intact. When backups are stored in (potentially fixed-sized) blobs, you have the option of verifying a single file in one action instead of potentially thousands.
By "dead" I'm also assuming you mean bit rot. While that's a real problem, it's not something that happens day after day at any scale an individual would be using. If the source is getting corrupted somehow and that corrupted file is being backed-up, this is what version history is for.