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November 13th, 2008

Back up your online data. Now.

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 3:30 am

Categories: Customer experience, Service level management, Venture capital

Tags: Data, Litigation, Business Operations, Phil Wainewright, Image, Software As A Service (SaaS), Storage, Emerging Technologies, Hardware

The dark side of the cloud is the risk of financial failure at your provider. At the end of October, Digital Railroad, a photo archiving and commerce site used by over 1,500 professional photographers, shut down without warning. Users had just 48 hours to recover images stored on the site. Even if all of them had been in a position to log on and tried to download their data, it’s doubtful there would have been enough bandwidth to service the demand.

Lightning stormBut surely if a site has a paying, professional customer base of that size, someone will step in and pick up the business? Hosting companies I’ve spoken to in the industry who specialize in SaaS hosting have said they’d rather keep a service alive until another owner takes over than wipe the systems clean and start over. But it depends who owns the hardware. In the case of Digital Railroad, after two failed attempts to find a purchaser for its image storage and retrieval assets, company representatives on November 10 announced this devastating news for anyone still hoping to retrieve images stored there (I’ve bolded the chilling three words that sealed their fate):

“Without a commitment for the purchase of its assets, DRR’s senior secured creditor will move to take physical possession of the hardware on which the intellectual property of DRR and the copyrighted images of its customers and partners reside. The creditor will have all information erased from the storage devices and then sell the equipment at auction.

“Digital Railroad had hoped that it could preserve the images on the storage devices so that the owners of these images could recover them. Unfortunately, this was not achievable. We apologize for the difficulties that this has created but without additional resources we have no other recourse.”

Does this example mean we should all stop using cloud providers and go back to the ‘good old days’ of running our own software and servers? Of course not. You’re more likely to lose everything to a disk failure on your own machines than you are to a business failure of a thid-party provider. But it’s still essential in either case to have a back-up strategy.

This is especially important while the ongoing credit crunch continues to create black swan eventualities that people haven’t planned for:

I’ve said before that I think a SaaS code of conduct should include some assurance that a service will continue operating for long enough to put other arrangements in place even if the provider goes out of business. It’s up to providers to work out how to set up an assurance of that kind, but I suspect the developing economic conditions will make it more and more of a selling point for those that do it. In the meantime (and irrespective of what providers do or don’t do) customers have got to get into the habit of making sure their data is backed up either on-premise or at some other cloud provider, and they must prepare a recovery plan so that they know what to do if disaster unexpectedly strikes their provider.

Phil WainewrightPhil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 33 Talkback(s)
That's kind of cool but...
The fact that Elephant Drive (sorry for any misspellings)is the only alternative solution in the cloud kind of underlays some of the problems with going with cloud storage, and services. What happens ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: mr1972 Posted on: 01/05/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Don't think it's viable...  ccrashh2@... | 11/13/08
Buzzwords and the foolishness the bring...  storm14k | 11/13/08
Depends on the business  Flying Pig | 11/14/08
You???re more likely  frgough | 11/13/08
IMHO, any company responsible for customer data...  BitTwiddler | 11/13/08
They have to call it "the cloud"  GuidingLight | 11/13/08
Term Cloud  jhimes | 11/14/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  c28560 | 11/13/08
BackUp strategy  rharder | 11/14/08
Data data everywhere  914four | 11/16/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  mr1972 | 11/13/08
The creditor may own the hardware ...  kd5auq | 11/13/08
Herein lies the problem.  jrf2027@... | 11/13/08
I like most of what you said...  mr1972 | 11/13/08
The cost of opening your IT to web based users...  914four | 11/16/08
I haven't seen the security on the cloud  mr1972 | 11/17/08
Tell me AGAIN why "cloud computing" should be the future (nt).  CobraA1 | 11/13/08
I second that. What is the point of cloud computing  croberts | 11/13/08
They want your data - the only thing they don't have  scott1329 | 11/14/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  amywohl | 11/14/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  Timpraetor | 11/14/08
A matter of specialization  devries@... | 11/14/08
You will lose in the Cloud  Daedalu | 11/14/08
Not more likely to lose everything to disk failure  Flying Pig | 11/14/08
What if the drive failure is caused by...  914four | 11/16/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  Consultan428 | 11/14/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  mrcoat | 11/15/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  781lc | 11/16/08
RE: Back up your online data. Now.  Jensays | 11/18/08
Listen up Xdrive Consumers....!  XDMOlson | 11/20/08
Xdrive account holders have 27 days to get their assets...  XDMOlson | 12/17/08
The Twelve days of Xdrive  XDMOlson | 12/31/08
That's kind of cool but...  mr1972 | 01/05/09

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