"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
This thread has evolved far from suggestions on how best to store films, but I can play too.I am surprised that these "Cryptoware" nasties can somehow also overide the "Go Back" and restore type applications and accessories.
NO Frog..we have direct to screen...no film anymore...so nice!
because as the files are corrupted, they replace the good files that are stored. you start backing up corrupted files that essentially have a timer on them as to when they lock up and demand payment.you don't know it's happening until it's too late....but go ahead and take your chances the way you are doing it.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware_(malware)
IF the clound backup provider is offering the right servive, the ransomware/crypto viruses will only infect the latest backup version. You should be able to restore to a version before the file was corrupted.
Quote from: Frog on February 07, 2014, 01:08:29 PMThis thread has evolved far from suggestions on how best to store films, but I can play too.I am surprised that these "Cryptoware" nasties can somehow also overide the "Go Back" and restore type applications and accessories.Andy I did not intend to derail the thread, however this is proving somewhat helpful in setting-up my backups in the future. And I also wanted to caution others.Quote from: jvanick on February 07, 2014, 01:42:13 PMIF the clound backup provider is offering the right servive, the ransomware/crypto viruses will only infect the latest backup version. You should be able to restore to a version before the file was corrupted.The previous versions of this thing did not encrypt shadow back-ups or 1st versions, however this one does. I can not stress to you all what this has done to our business. My I.T. guy gave me a list of the files that are encrypted today and we lost 12,000+ files and are still counting. Our new HD will have a third timed save option that disconnects from the network.
I don't think you're understanding the concept of versioning. Google drive saves the last 100 versions of each file. Versions are created whenever the modified date is changed locally and the file is synced. Unless you are changing a file over 100 times AFTER the cryptovirus gets to it AND syncing it over 100 times you can restore from an uneffected version. It only replaces the file locally or on the main file tree in drive (or other backup solutions that support versioning), it does not replace the past versions of the files. In google drive those past versions are stored on redundant servers and do not count against your storage limitations.