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Do your own backups (AWS deleted person's 10-year account and all data without warning)

ralfralf Member
edited August 2025 in General

I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

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Comments

  • tentortentor Member, Host Rep
    edited August 2025

    Do your own OFFSITE backups

    UPD. Actually should be more like multi vendor

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited August 2025
  • @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

  • @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    Very well written and the site design is awesome.

    Thanked by 1raindog308
  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker
    edited August 2025

    @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    No, you basically click-bated us.

    At first I thought "unholy fuck, I hope ralf somehow gets his data back!". But now, having glanced over "the message" you wanted to propagate, i.e. the linked article, all I say is this:

    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

  • AWS is for burning money and losing your backups!

    Thanked by 2384_cz WyvernCo
  • LordSpockLordSpock Member, Host Rep

    I've worked with a number of clients over the years that have had their faith totally within the cloud ecosystem they are using. It's infuriating at first, but quite easy to snap them out of if you run a proof-of-concept with a blank-ish system.

    I'm quite old fashioned though... I still like having semi-regular backups on magnetic tape. Unless there is an EMP, recovery from any catastrophe is a loooot easier.

  • angstromangstrom Moderator

    @ralf , I've edited the thread title in order to make it less misleading

    For the historical record, the original title was:

    Do you own backups (AWS deleted my 10-year account and all data without warning)

    Thanked by 4jsg maverick ralf 384_cz
  • VoidVoid Member

    That font is giving me eye cancer but thanks for sharing.

    Thanked by 2rcy026 ebietsy
  • ralfralf Member

    Oh noes! I think I've confused everyone here...

    @MikePT said:
    Very well written and the site design is awesome.

    Just to be clear, this isn't my article. I have no connection with the author, I just found the article on HackerNews and came to a completely opposite conclusion but still found it interesting, which is why I thought I'd share it.

    @jsg said:
    No, you basically click-bated us.

    At first I thought "unholy fuck, I hope ralf somehow gets his data back!". But now, having glanced over "the message" you wanted to propagate, i.e. the linked article, all I say is this:

    No, no, no. It's not my data.

    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

    Exactly, the article's point was "AWS deleted all my data, how can a company be so crap?" and I wanted to share it here (and apparently had a typo in the title, maybe confusing the issue) as "Do your own backups"

    @angstrom said:
    @ralf , I've edited the thread title in order to make it less misleading

    For the historical record, the original title was:

    Do you own backups (AWS deleted my 10-year account and all data without warning)

    If we're changing the bit in brackets, we should just remove it entirely.

    The bit in brackets was the title of the article as posted by the author of the article, I wanted to share it as "Do your own backups", because that should have been the key takeaway IMHO.

    Thanked by 2jsg MikePT
  • database backup everyday, files backup every week. all sent to Google

  • angstromangstrom Moderator
    edited August 2025

    @ralf said:

    @angstrom said:
    @ralf , I've edited the thread title in order to make it less misleading

    For the historical record, the original title was:

    Do you own backups (AWS deleted my 10-year account and all data without warning)

    If we're changing the bit in brackets, we should just remove it entirely.

    The bit in brackets was the title of the article as posted by the author of the article, I wanted to share it as "Do your own backups", because that should have been the key takeaway IMHO.

    I've edited the title again:

    • There was also a typo in your original title: you wrote "Do you own backups", which I read as a question meaning 'Do you own/possess backups?', but you intended to write "Do your own backups". This is corrected now
    • I've kept the reference in parentheses to AWS because it's nevertheless essential to this thread's particular topic and of interest in its own right. (That is, this thread isn't merely about the importance of doing your own backups)
    Thanked by 3jsg maverick ralf
  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker
    edited August 2025

    @ralf said:
    Oh noes! I think I've confused everyone here...

    @jsg said:
    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

    Exactly, the article's point was "AWS deleted all my data, how can a company be so crap?" and I wanted to share it here (and apparently had a typo in the title, maybe confusing the issue) as "Do your own backups"

    Then a title like "Do your own backups properly - or else [[title of linked article]!)" would have been better and way less misleading (and as I perceived it click-baiting).

    That's why I thanked @angstrom. He made the point somewhat more clear.

  • ralfralf Member

    @jsg said:

    @ralf said:
    Oh noes! I think I've confused everyone here...

    @jsg said:
    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

    Exactly, the article's point was "AWS deleted all my data, how can a company be so crap?" and I wanted to share it here (and apparently had a typo in the title, maybe confusing the issue) as "Do your own backups"

    Then a title like "Do your own backups properly - or else [[title of linked article]!)" would have been better and way less misleading (and as I perceived it click-baiting).

    That's why I thanked @angstrom. He made the point somewhat more clear.

    Yeah, no worries. It's all good. I was tired and just about to go to bed, but thought I'd share it just before I did. My explanatory paragraph was a jumble of incoherence as well! If I was more awake, it'd have been better...

  • @ralf said:

    @jsg said:

    @ralf said:
    Oh noes! I think I've confused everyone here...

    @jsg said:
    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

    Exactly, the article's point was "AWS deleted all my data, how can a company be so crap?" and I wanted to share it here (and apparently had a typo in the title, maybe confusing the issue) as "Do your own backups"

    Then a title like "Do your own backups properly - or else [[title of linked article]!)" would have been better and way less misleading (and as I perceived it click-baiting).

    That's why I thanked @angstrom. He made the point somewhat more clear.

    Yeah, no worries. It's all good. I was tired and just about to go to bed, but thought I'd share it just before I did. My explanatory paragraph was a jumble of incoherence as well! If I was more awake, it'd have been better...

    still, appreciate the post very much <3

  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad

    Cloud backup is fine. Just have more than one vendor.

    I backup all of our important stuff at work to Backblaze B2 as full VM snapshots, and then app backups of important files and databases to Backblaze B2 as well as to Cloudflare R2.

    Thanked by 1ehab
  • angstromangstrom Moderator

    @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    I don't necessarily doubt the author's version of events (even if he becomes very emotional towards the end), and it seems that the automated nature of AWS left very little room for timely and useful human intervention, but the initial triggering incident nevertheless seemed to be a failure of the author to respond to the verification request within the requested time frame (or so it seems to me)

    This isn't at all to excuse AWS -- not at all -- but the story then becomes involved and complex

    In any case, yes, the lesson is to keep one's backups at a provider that is independent of the provider that is hosting the original files

    Thanked by 2ralf cainyxues
  • @ralf said:
    Oh noes! I think I've confused everyone here...

    @MikePT said:
    Very well written and the site design is awesome.

    Just to be clear, this isn't my article. I have no connection with the author, I just found the article on HackerNews and came to a completely opposite conclusion but still found it interesting, which is why I thought I'd share it.

    @jsg said:
    No, you basically click-bated us.

    At first I thought "unholy fuck, I hope ralf somehow gets his data back!". But now, having glanced over "the message" you wanted to propagate, i.e. the linked article, all I say is this:

    No, no, no. It's not my data.

    One would hope that that idiot finally has learned his lesson. One does NOT rely on only 1 provider!, period. No matter how big that provider is.

    One always has (at least) two backups in two locations, preferably at least a couple of hundred miles apart and with different providers. Plus ideally a disaster plan (e.g. what if one is struck by disaster?).

    Exactly, the article's point was "AWS deleted all my data, how can a company be so crap?" and I wanted to share it here (and apparently had a typo in the title, maybe confusing the issue) as "Do your own backups"

    @angstrom said:
    @ralf , I've edited the thread title in order to make it less misleading

    For the historical record, the original title was:

    Do you own backups (AWS deleted my 10-year account and all data without warning)

    If we're changing the bit in brackets, we should just remove it entirely.

    The bit in brackets was the title of the article as posted by the author of the article, I wanted to share it as "Do your own backups", because that should have been the key takeaway IMHO.

    He did put all eggs in the same basket, contrary to what he wrote. Backups should always be external.

    Thanked by 1ralf
  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad

    @angstrom said:

    @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    I don't necessarily doubt the author's version of events (even if he becomes very emotional towards the end), and it seems that the automated nature of AWS left very little room for timely and useful human intervention, but the initial triggering incident nevertheless seemed to be a failure of the author to respond to the verification request within the requested time frame (or so it seems to me)

    This isn't at all to excuse AWS -- not at all -- but the story then becomes involved and complex

    In any case, yes, the lesson is to keep one's backups at a provider that is independent of the provider that is hosting the original files

    I’d replace ’at a’ with ’at several’

    Thanked by 2xemaps ralf
  • zedzed Member

    It's kind of a non-story right? If your data matters make sure you take care of it. He's mad they deleted his shit (sure, I would be) and so he angryblogged about it.

    If the bit about an engineer accidentally his data, well that sucks but it doesn't really matter since the data's gone regardless and really who hasn't accidentally somebody's data at some point?

    Generally if you didn't take backups seriously yet it's because you haven't experienced needing backups and not having them yet. Once that happens you start taking it seriously.
    If you're thick you might have to repeat the learning process for things like testing restores.

    I did lol at how he has customers totallying $400k/mo in aws billing and they're all ready to jump ship with him, but whatever.

  • emghemgh Member, Megathread Squad
    edited August 2025

    @tentor said: Actually should be more like multi vendor

    EXACTLY

    Off-side isn't enough. Several vendors is needed. Not sure how I missed this.

    Thanked by 1tentor
  • Pretty terrifying they just randomly demand KYC on a ten year customer. I guess there was a missed payment problem, but they could have at least given him some options to get the bill paid up before demanding invasive PII. Guessing they just wanted that in order to send him to collections and not actually help him.

  • @zed said:
    It's kind of a non-story right? If your data matters make sure you take care of it. He's mad they deleted his shit (sure, I would be) and so he angryblogged about it.

    If the bit about an engineer accidentally his data, well that sucks but it doesn't really matter since the data's gone regardless and really who hasn't accidentally somebody's data at some point?

    Generally if you didn't take backups seriously yet it's because you haven't experienced needing backups and not having them yet. Once that happens you start taking it seriously.
    If you're thick you might have to repeat the learning process for things like testing restores.

    I did lol at how he has customers totallying $400k/mo in aws billing and they're all ready to jump ship with him, but whatever.

    Dude, you didn't read the story right? He did almost everything right, multi-region backups and everything. AWS fucked up. The followup story is more interesting: https://www.seuros.com/blog/aws-restored-account-plot-twist/

    Account restored, when the shit hit the fan to the CEO. But "My data is mostly back - I lost the last weeks of work because the spaceship wasn’t installed and encryption keys weren’t synced. But losing weeks is better than losing everything."

    Thanked by 2darkimmortal ralf
  • zedzed Member
    edited August 2025

    @vicaya said: Dude, you didn't read the story right? He did almost everything right, multi-region backups and everything. AWS fucked up. The followup story is more interesting: https://www.seuros.com/blog/aws-restored-account-plot-twist/

    Yes of course AWS fucked up, but nothing about the story surprised me and hopefully he's expanded outside of AWS so next time it won't be so devastating. Even the mechanics behind the issue isn't really surprising, but maybe I'm just extra cynical.

    Anyway it's good he's back online and a shame he had go thru a month of hell. Score again for social media saving the day. Isn't that scary too?

    edit: thanks for the followup, I hadn't seen it.

    Thanked by 1ralf
  • @MikePT said: He did put all eggs in the same basket, contrary to what he wrote. Backups should always be external.

    i agree. backing up with same company different datacenter is not called a external backup as account operated is same. If someone really does want to keep is with same company different dc, then create new account in with your family member's name/card and use it. Though is is applicable for huge providers like aws/google etc. For small LE provides better keep backup with totally different provider. We never know the entire DC can vanish!

    Thanked by 1MikePT
  • LowEndStalkerLowEndStalker Member
    edited August 2025

    @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    valid

    to an extent

    "Before anyone says “you put all your eggs in one basket,” let me be clear: I didn’t." he did.

  • @ralf said:
    I've gone with a title that's a slightly less popular take on this story, but this story does nonetheless show how important keeping your own backups and practising recovery is...

    https://seuros.com/blog/aws-deleted-my-10-year-account-without-warning/

    I've tried both firefox and chromium, but I don't see any story text on that page. Just a headline and a large graphic.

  • @david said: but I don't see any story text on that page

    might be font issue. They're using some weird font (Serif)

  • This kind of operation is very frightening.

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