rsync...is not a backup strategy, being exactly as vulnerable to ransomware are as your local file. Unless you pair it with something else, but then that's not exactly 'rsync for backup'
I thought about this exact problem a month ago when I got paranoid (I'm on Windows) , and my solution involved setting up a separate cheap Linux node in my home and attaching my backup drive to it. The server is locally…
Yep, agreed. Most of this advice is useful even if you're just building an open source project that you're passionate about, and your post helps a lot. Nobody wants to build a product in vaccum that has no users, no…
Yeah I'm sure that's what dinosaurs thought.
Do it. I have a cheap Linux server (non pi) running in my home, and it's immeasurably useful. It functions as a combination of a backup server (with an attached 8tb drive), Plex server (another 2 Tb media drive), PiHole…
Oh man I'd pay so much to be able to own bar.baz.
rsync...is not a backup strategy, being exactly as vulnerable to ransomware are as your local file. Unless you pair it with something else, but then that's not exactly 'rsync for backup'
I thought about this exact problem a month ago when I got paranoid (I'm on Windows) , and my solution involved setting up a separate cheap Linux node in my home and attaching my backup drive to it. The server is locally…
Yep, agreed. Most of this advice is useful even if you're just building an open source project that you're passionate about, and your post helps a lot. Nobody wants to build a product in vaccum that has no users, no…
Yeah I'm sure that's what dinosaurs thought.
Do it. I have a cheap Linux server (non pi) running in my home, and it's immeasurably useful. It functions as a combination of a backup server (with an attached 8tb drive), Plex server (another 2 Tb media drive), PiHole…
Oh man I'd pay so much to be able to own bar.baz.