Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Technological solutions for extremely long term data archiving?

Are there any good technical solutions for extremely long term archiving of data, for example for 25 to 100 years?

Somehow I just don't have a lot of confidence that a SQL 2000 backup file will be usable in court cases or for historians in 25 to 100 years.

This is a customer requirement, not just speculation.

This is comparable to trying to trying to do something useful with a back up for ENIAC or reading Atari Writer wordprocesing files. The hardware doesn't necessarily exist anymore, the storage media is likely corrupt, the professionals for using the technology probably don't exist anymore, etc.

like image 502
MatthewMartin Avatar asked May 28 '09 15:05

MatthewMartin


People also ask

What is the best way to store data long term?

Optical media such as CD, DVD, and Blu-ray discs happen to offer the most ideal long-term storage solution. Not only does this medium provide better resistance against loss of data integrity, it also strikes an ideal balance between cost and ease of storage/retrieval.

What is the solution on AWS for long term archive storage?

AWS offers archive storage solutions for long term retention, compliance, and digital preservation. Amazon S3 provides you with virtually unlimited scale, 99.999999999% durability, and the highest standards of data security, all with lower costs and faster access times than on-premises tape storage.

How do you archive long life?

CD, DVD or Blu-ray Disc One of the most significant benefits of CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray is that they last for a long, long time. These discs can last up to 50 years with proper storage.

How do you store data for 100 years?

Save your data in multiple formats onto the medium which is the most probably readable in the future. Use only the best quality disks, which are designed for lasting long. Make multiple copies and keep them all in different places (at home, fiend's house, office and rented vault).


1 Answers

Actually, printing on Acid-free paper is probably a much better solution than any more advanced technological one. It is much more likely that the IT tech of +100 years will be able to high-speed scan and load print than any digital data storage based on 100 year-old media access HW, technology and standards, 100 year-old disk/file format standards and 100 year-old data encoding standards.

Disagree? I've got a whole attic full of vinyl CD's, 8-tracks, cassette tapes, floppy disks (4 different densities!) that argue otherwise. And they are only 20 years old! (OK, the 8-tracks are closer to 30).

The fact is that there is only one data storage & archiving technology that has ever withstood the test of time over 100 years or more and still been cost effectively retrievable, and thats writing/printing on physical media.

My advice? Don't trust any archival strategy until it's been tested, and there's only one that has passed the 100-year test so far.

like image 151
RBarryYoung Avatar answered Oct 21 '22 18:10

RBarryYoung