A polite warning to anyone hosting a website

Soldato
Joined
18 Oct 2002
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Over in Australia the host DistributeIT was apparently hacked.

Over 4000 people have lost their websites & the backups have been deleted as well (obviously no tapes!). Quite a nasty hack as many people relied on the websites as their livelihood.

This has surely put tehm out of business.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/06/21/hacks_wipe_aus_web_and_data/

Just a polite reminder that you should ensure *you* backup your data personally. Don't trust your web host as their policies around backup may not be as robust as you think.

I'm sure a lot of the hosting regulars, with far more experience than me, can advise you on such matters and the added protections you can employ to protect your sites.
 
since about 1986 I don't think I've ever lost any personal data, it's all been backed up. I can't believe people do, it's just such an easy thing to do (though time consuming)
 
To be honest I'm not surprised at all. I've seen data loss in 2 companies now. And I've only worked for 3.
 
Why? If it did you'd just wait for them to get the servers back online, re-upload your site and restore the DB from your backup. ;)

Of course.

But how long would I have to wait if they were dealt a mortal blow like these other guys seem to have been? :p
 
since about 1986 I don't think I've ever lost any personal data, it's all been backed up. I can't believe people do, it's just such an easy thing to do (though time consuming)

i haven;t lost any data in a long time either, although sometimes i wish i had, my documents folders are stacked with files that should be deleted, files as far back as my secondary school NRA writeups and a level stuff
 
with fast internet connections and cheap storage, you wonder why backups aren't more frequent ..., a sql dump and rsync/or some remote copy is all you need
 
with fast internet connections and cheap storage, you wonder why backups aren't more frequent ..., a sql dump and rsync/or some remote copy is all you need

yeah, i have a weekly sql backup that's emailed to me. With most websites that use CMS, a sql dump is 99% of the work done.

Just download your actual files maybe once every two months or so (depending on how often you upload new files), and you're all done.
 
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