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Long-Term Storage of Moderately Large Datasets?

hawkeyeMI writes "I have a small scientific services company, and we end up generating fairly large datasets (2-3 TB) for each customer. We don't have to ship all of that, but we do need to keep some compressed archives. The best I can come up with right now is to buy some large hard drives, use software RAID in linux to make a RAID5 set out of them, and store them in a safe deposit box. I feel like there must be a better way for a small business, but despite some research into Blu-ray, I've not been able to find a good, cost-effective alternative. A tape library would be impractical at the present time. What do you recommend?"

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  1. Re:Exactly what you're doing by forgottenusername · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't think it's a great solution. You're storing relatively fragile hard drives in a raid5 configuration in a lock box? It's not like you can tell if one of the drives goes bad and needs to be replaced when it's sitting in a box. You'd have to regularly pull the data sets out, fire them up and make sure everything is still functional.

    I'd at least want to do 2 complete sets of mirrored drives.

    Tape storage does store better.

    Depending on how important the data is, I might do something like a local mirrored drive set in storage and an online copy at something like rsync.net - stay away from s3, it's not designed to protect data, despite what AWS fans may say.