> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
> Nahum Shalman
> 
> Whatever the shelf life, my only concern was that anyone truly
> ditching HDDs in favor of SSDs should be aware of the differences and take
> the appropriate precautions accordingly.

This is a good point - but remember that even tapes, hard drives, and optical 
media all have shelf lives, because they're all chemical and/or electric states 
on a microscopic scale, that will deteriorate.

There is very little data out there about archival shelf life for any of these 
media - tapes have the most information available, and even *that* can be 
difficult to find, and/or inaccurate. 

For magnetic material, the degradation is "self-demagnetization" which occurs 
when adjacent bits oppose each other, and slowly cause one or both bits to 
neutralize each other.

For nand flash material, the degradation is caused by a leakage current, 
causing the floating gate to slowly lose its electric charge over time.

For optical material, I don't know why or how the phase change material 
degrades over time, but I know I've used a lot of them, and have periodically 
gone back to read and verify media over time, and have found it degrades very 
quickly - Around 20% of burned DVD's go bad in about a year.

For both magnetic material and flash material, the way to refresh the data is 
to read and re-write the data to the medium periodically. And store redundancy 
and cksums. That way, as the bits *slowly* deteriorate, you're still able to 
get reliable reads from it, and each time you write, you're storing fresh bits 
in their fully un-deteriorated state.
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