Slashdot Mirror


Coppola Loses All His Data

Colin Smith writes in with an object lesson in backup methodology — once you have backed everything up, take it somewhere else. "Film director Francis Ford Coppola has appealed for the return of his computer backup device following a robbery at his house in Argentina on Wednesday. He told Argentine broadcaster Todo Noticias he had lost 15 years' worth of data, including writing and photographs of his family."

21 of 266 comments (clear)

  1. don't worry, check emule by randuev · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't worry, mate, It will be backed up very solid quite soon :) You will never lose it again. It will be as safe as it could be. (Unless you'll decide to purchase it and keep it private, of course)

  2. Honestly by chuckymonkey · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why is this news? Someone somewhere didn't back up their data and the hdd was stolen. Happens a lot people, next thing you know we're going to be hearing about how Paris Hilton bought an iPhone and an iGasm.

    --
    "Some books contain the machinery required to create and sustain universes."-Tycho
  3. Godfather by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    The backup device was taken and in its place was a severed horse's head....

  4. Step 3 in The Tao of Backup by Vainglorious+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oops. Someone missed the 3rd step in the Tao of Backup : separation

    That list again in full:

    Backup all your data

    Backup frequently

    Take some backups off-site

    Keep some old backups

    Test your backups

    Secure your backups

    Perform integrity checking

    And note that it's not necessary to purchase anything to achieve backup enlightenment.

    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush
  5. Re:More than one physical location by gregbaker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This still doesn't help in the event of catastrophe: fire, flood, etc. The backup has to go off-site. Some suggestions: parents' house, the office, a friend's.

    I keep an up-to-date backup in my office, and drop a DVD or two in a drawer at my parents' every year or so.

  6. Re:Theft prevention ideas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Put a Vista sticker on it.

  7. Make it so it's no big deal.... by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The data is a zillion times more valuable than the PC. Figure out the most painless way to backup the data and hide the backup disk somewhere.

    And... look! We're back on topic!

    I've been thinking of getting one of those hard disks with the network connector on the back. If you combine this with one of those "network across power lines" adapters you could put the hard disk anywhere in the house (attic, basement...) and still access it from your main PC.

    For a "high crime area" this seems ideal.

    PS: Yes, the chances of him getting his data back is zero. It's a pity he had to learn the hard way....

    I go around telling all my friends to back up their data, how important this is, how they could lose 100% their baby/wedding photos in a millisecond, etc. but I know none of them ever do.

    --
    No sig today...
  8. So he got busted? by The+Amazing+Fish+Boy · · Score: 3, Funny

    In Holland there was a nice program where people could get their house robbed by a formerly professional thief (convicted, sentenced, done his time).

    Not very professional.
  9. nothing funny about it by CranberryKing · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't believe this was tagged with haha. Why is it funny when non-techsavvy people lose all their valuable data? It's not funny. It's terrible. As techies, we should be educating & empowering people, not isolating them.

  10. He then received a package... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...which was a transistor wrapped up in a newspaper, along with a note that said, "Maxtor sleeps with the fishes".

  11. There is not a good backup solution by LS · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When losing the sole copy of data, everyone always laughs and says you should have backed up. People, shut up please. That is a fair criticism to an IT or development professional, but not to an average computer user. While average users do know that data loss can occur and will often backup important files to a CD or DVD, there is no standard and easy way for users to backup ALL their important data, do it at regular intervals, test it, an distribute it geographically. Much of this process must be automated. Also, either the quality of media needs to go up, or specifically designed backup-grade hard drives and media need to be developed and released, because the current crop of equipment is pretty unreliable.

    Are people expected to keep a second car around if their main one fails? Are people expected to perform regular scheduled maintenance on their cars themselves? No, because it is too complex and troublesome for the average users.

    I've reviewed several backup applications and services, and none of them would pass the "mom" easy of use test. I believe there is a potential market for a robust comprehensive backup system...

    LS

    --
    There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
  12. Re:More than one physical location by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I make video DVDs for friends sometimes. Usually there's a few hundred MB free space, so I stash a backup set -- my email, and other documents mostly -- in a data folder, ignored by players (though of course visible on a PC). I use encrypted RAR archives, their encryption is quite strong and uncracked as far as I know. Also of course on my own DVDs, the latter most likely useful in case of computer failure.

  13. use a safe & lock by OrangeTide · · Score: 4, Informative

    A safe would be a good investment, most are fire proof which is important too.

    For a USB back-up unit, get one with a K-slot on it and bolt it to your desk or wall. It will prevent theft in a robbery, a cable lock (the kind with the hoop that bonds permanently is the way to go, stronger than a K-slot). Using a lock on your home system is especially important if you use a laptop, all laptops have a K-slot.

    I love my old Powermac, it has a loop for a cable lock and when the loop is in use it prevents the case from being opened too. Some PC cases have that as well, rarely as fancy, but sufficient.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:use a safe & lock by (H)elix1 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh man, that brings back a funny memory. I was working a customer where there were many consultants parked in a cube farm. An evening came, and most everyone left the laptops chained via a kensington lock rather than un-network and take them home. They came back to find all of the laptops still there - minus the battery, hdd, memory, dvd, and any other removable part - without being overly gentle on the deconstruction.

    2. Re:use a safe & lock by pherthyl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think we eventually concluded that a fireproof safe doesn't really gain you much in the real world.

      In the real world?? What, do you work in the twin towers? Fires in office buildings don't generally proceed far enough to make the whole building collapse. Passing on a safe just because there is some wildly unlikely sequence of events that would still destroy your documents isn't very logical.

    3. Re:use a safe & lock by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A safe would be a good investment, most are fire proof which is important too.

      Yes, but let's not forget that what we're dealing with here is a forced entry into a place where the robbers were waiving knives in the staff's faces. Nothing makes a knife waive faster than when it's accompanied by the phrase (how ever you say it in Spanish), "I know you know how to open this safe, so get to it..."

      If Coppola can't afford the bandwith to push to an off-site storage service, I don't know who can.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:use a safe & lock by ozbird · · Score: 4, Informative

      A safe would be a good investment, most are fire proof which is important too.

      A safe that is "fire proof" for paper (< 451 F) is not "fire proof" for your backups - you need a data/media safe, which are significantly more expensive.

  14. I suspect that there is more to the story... by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Informative

    Slashdot story quality is often low; apparently Slasdot editors don't even Google the stories. This is the real story; it was an armed robbery: Coppola Says Robbery Cost Years of Data (AP). This poorly edited story has even more detail: Thieves Steal Francis Ford Coppola's Everything.

    I suspect that there is more to the story than we know. I suspect that he is more worried about release of information than loss of information. The AP article says he had a backup copy of a screenplay on which he is working.

    The moral of the story is: Have proprietary data? Use TrueCrypt. Supports Windows and Linux. As all encryption software must be, it is open source, very mature, and supports both Windows and Linux. Supports encrypted devices and encrypted folders, including hidden folders.

    To encrypt a file, use the free open source Gnu Privacy Guard.

  15. Re:More than one physical location by CODiNE · · Score: 4, Funny

    in a drawer at my parents'
    Upstairs isn't usually considered an "offsite" backup.

    --
    Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
  16. Online backups now n00b-proof and trustworthy by mbaciarello · · Score: 4, Informative

    I haven't seen any comments about online backup solutions.

    They're quite cheap (~ $50-$100 per year with unlimited storage) now and they make for the (almost) perfect off-site backup solution.

    I've tried Mozy.com and Amazon S3.

    While not technically a dedicated backup solution, Amazon is quite cost-effective for me and has amazing bandwidth -- I can upload or download through my 24/1.2 mbit connection at full speed 99% of the time. Yes, it's not very user-friendly at first, but after setting up JungleDisk (or your choice of WebDAV interface) and any backup application the first time, you just let the scheduler work its way through your data.

    Mozy is cheap at $60/year/computer with unlimited storage, but I get modest connection speeds to their servers. Yet, their Windows client is extremely simple to set up. The Mac client (still a beta) is also good, although not ready for "production" work, yet. Linux is a no-go, though.

    Of course it's always best to also keep a local device for quick backups/restores of large amounts of data, but the peace of mind and convenience afforded by online solutions... It's priceless to me...

  17. Re:off site by The+Dobber · · Score: 3, Funny

    Didn't you watch that episode of MythBusters?

    Sure you can get it open, but you'll most likely toast the contents.