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If you are hearing stuff by reading my comment - I suggest you seek professional help.
Our LowEndPsychiatric clinic is probably not good enough to help.
Ok
...
I think @Daniel15 nailed it. Yes, @Francisco is right, (not only) drive prices are insane now, but that's irrelevant because they are high for everyone. Theoretically there probably are some providers with a nice "old" stock but I doubt that they wouldn't ask todays storage capacity prices.
So, I think it boils down to large investment now and then saving in the long run -vs- spreading the cost and no high investment but paying more all in all over time.
But there is another point that IMO deserves some attention: dependency and trust. trust as in "can you and do you really trust some provider to do everything properly?" (cough HostSolutions *cough) and dependency as in "are you sure the country your data are stored and your country will never become enemies, sanction on another, etc, and that both your and your providers connectivity will always be good and high enough, etc"?
If it's "just some stuff" you have a situation that is quite different from "those data must absolutely never be lost nor inaccessible".
Fun fact: some governments actually print out (on special paper) their data. that is their most trusted doomsday backup solution. I kid you not.
Took you exactly a month to come up with that zinger
Maybe one day Hosthatch will offer their $10/month 10 TB plan again, and you could stack 10 of them to get 100TB for $100/month. I think they said they likely won't offer that plan again any time soon due to the price of hard drives.
Yeah... This type of decision comes up a lot in life, mostly when considering to rent/loan/lease vs buy (eg. houses, cars, servers, etc). In general, if you're going to have the thing for a long period of time, buying makes more sense than renting, whereas if you only need it short-term or want to change it a lot (eg. move house often, get a new car every few years, etc.), renting may be better.
This is an extreme case, but Instagram saved a loooot of money once they moved from Amazon EC2 and S3 to Facebook data centers after the acquisiton: https://www.wired.com/2014/06/facebook-instagram/
Remember that for any backup storage methods with less than the likes of Google Cloud/AWS S3 services which have redundant high availability built into the price, then you would need to factor in the cost of backing up the backups too.
As backup data set size increases, the cost for backup of less redundant backups will drive prices closer or over the amount Google Cloud/AWS S3 like service prices eventually.
Wasn't tape? I thought they had data backups on tapes.
https://www.backovia.com
https://www.scaleway.com/en/dedibox/pricing/?family=STORE
You can buy 1600 64GB USB sticks
Well I dont have the patience and time to browse this troll forum every day so yeah.
Literally only ever come up here if I need something.
how's the chia backups going
Too busy plotting chia, OP ain't listening.
Nope, not those (few) governments/agencies. Reason: tapes share many of the spindle problems (magnetic media).