For photos/videos why not just use Flickr Pro $24.95/year:

What do I get with a Pro account?

When you upgrade to a Pro account for just US$24.95 a year (or R$45.90
if you’re in Brazil ) you get all this:

Unlimited photo uploads (20MB per photo)
Unlimited video uploads (90 seconds max, 500MB per video)
The ability to show HD Video
Unlimited storage
Unlimited bandwidth
Archiving of high-resolution original images
The ability to replace a photo
Post any of your photos or videos in up to 60 group pools
Ad-free browsing and sharing
View count and referrer statistics

On Feb 13, 4:27 am, grydholt <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just heard Joe's search for an online backup solution. As I understood
> him, he does not need instant online access to the files ("I like
> robots"). My low cost solution would be to buy a large 2TB drive and
> put it into a Mac (I guess Windows is not an option in this case). The
> drive would then be used to consolidate all the photos. In other
> words,  all photos from various sources (other laptops, desktops, and
> various harddrives) should be copied onto this drive. Then open a
> Carbonite account and backup the photos for a flat $55 a year. The
> advantage is clearly the price, some of the disadvantages:
>
>     - Can only backup internal drives, you need to copy all photos to
> this drive
>     - You cannot easily access the data from other places, this is a
> local backup solution only. If you need access/backups from various
> computers, you'll need something like dropbox or spideroak, but that's
> pricy
>
> Personally, I am running spideroak for all data, but it is running
> close to my 100GB limit. I plan to split my data into two tiers. One
> tier is that the data I want to easily share between computers like
> mp3 files and photos. I'll be able to keep this under 100GB for the
> foreseeable future. The other tier will be flac files and home videos
> (which kind of kills the Posse's argument that the normal user does
> not need TB's of backup). This tier, I plan to backup using something
> like Carbonite since it has a flat rate. I've set up my parent's
> computer with Carbonite and it was very user friendly (backup default
> Windows folders automatically).
>
> <tinfoil hat on>
> For Europeans, note that the data will probably be uploaded to the US,
> and I don't know if Carbonite falls under safe harbour agreements
> between the U.S. and the E.U. Of course, the data is supposed to be
> encrypted with your own personal key, but you never know...
> </tinfoil hat on>
>
> /grydholt

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