I run my own "cloud" servers. One locally and another off site. They are my boxes, managed by me. I store nothing on Apple, Samsung or Google clouds.
I'm betting on real clouds. Water droplets act as carriers for pixels. Ethernet uses anaesthetic. Hard drives are history.I think this thread is going really well.
pfft.I'm betting on real clouds. Water droplets act as carriers for pixels. Ethernet uses anaesthetic. Hard drives are history.
This is a simple one. I do not put any of my photographs on line and I do not back up any photographs in cloud storage. I will take my chances with the tinder dry climate in the US Southwest, thank you.
Yes I can and when I die it will be in my will to take a hammer to the hard drives destroying all the content.Great! Can you retrieve everything as quickly, easily and perfectly from one of your boxes as the other? In event of your death can your work be retrieved and printed by someone else? (i.e. have you trained somebody else how to retrieve your work, perhaps put that instruction in your will?).
Until 20 years ago every photograph in the world was taking its chances. Flickr is fine but has changed hands 3 times already. I wouldn't bet on it as an open access resource for future generations, but who knows? Digital media is in its infancy. The best way of anyone's photographs surviving is for them to become famous. That way they're spread in multiple domains and the hands of collectors with a financial investment in their future. Museums have people with PhDs in archiving, we guess. Today's cloud is yesterday's microfiche.I was "taking my chances" for a long time
...ballistic missiles, I suppose I should have some really distant offsite backup.
... They'll be too busy catching rats to eat and gathering rags to wear.
...
This is why I'm scheduling a meeting with Elon Musk about my idea of sending canisters of prints to the Moon and Mars as backup. Initially it's one-way. Retrieval costs extra.
OK, not that old! LTO2, but none of that new fangled t'internet cloud based stuff, so not exactly cutting edge!Surely you don't mean something like a 7-track Univac, 9-track IBM, or DECtape drive? That's really old school. God help you if it's anything from Iomega.
Tape is not good: the magnetization bleeds across the tape windings over the years. After 10-20 years, it's full of errors.
However, there is no guarantee that a cloud storage company will not go out of business at some point. Some already have. One can only hope to get enough advance notice to relocate one's files in time to prevent permanent loss.This OT fits perfectly with "ethics and philosophy of photography" because so many of us routinely whistle through the graveyard and falsely try to convince others that allegedly "archival" prints can be counted upon for the next generation.
My first ring binder of negatives is over 40 years old. My sister has the family's shoe boxes going back over a hundred. When people mention photo storage I assume we're talking about those sort of timeframes. I have absolutely no idea what digital storage media will be around in 40 years, much less a century.However, there is no guarantee that a cloud storage company will not go out of business at some point. Some already have. One can only hope to get enough advance notice to relocate one's files in time to prevent permanent loss.
You beat me to itWhat filter should I use for the cloud?
The only reason for the cloud is to make a crap load of money. Get you tied up with something. Eventually you give up trying to escape and pay "protection money" to save your documents. Google and Facebook will take over someday and we won't even know what happened. Local bank box, if you fear EMP wrap it up in Aluminum foil ( I where an Aluminum foil hat to keep my Samsung TV from reading my thoughtsCloud storage seems considerably more risky than local storage. I assumed the only logical reason for cloud was "access from anywhere and any device."
You're not telling us where cloud storage takes place. A binary digital source requires binary digital storage. Cloud is a euphemism for a non-local storage system. It doesn't involve water vapour at any point.
Cloud storage seems considerably more risky than local storage. I assumed the only logical reason for cloud was "access from anywhere and any device."
Yes, paranoia sells. The financial services industry grows rich on fear via the insurance racket. If you can convince everyone their photographs are at risk, you can make a killing. it's banking with people's memories as the currency.The only reason for the cloud is to make a crap load of money
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |