Further thoughts:

 

Is this a corporate environment where much of the data is effectively pooled, or
are you considering individual users having almost entirely separate data on
individual PC’s

 

If corporate, presumably the backups, and any restores will be done at the
central corporate site, with downloads of sensitive data being under corporate
control by ID, password, encryption and link (web attachment)

 

If not corporate, will the company be paying for the installation and
maintenance of the high-speed links to the users homes and anywhere else they
may wish to use their systems – hotels airports, internet-café’s and other
hotspots 

 

What considerations have been included to address security where a complete
system with corporate and personal access id’s and passwords (in the web history
and pagefile if nowhere else) may be imaged over other peoples modems and via
their servers.

 

What offsets and payment adjustments will be needed to address effects that
there may (will) be on tax (re benefits considered by the revenue department to
be income enhancing)  and associated pension and medical aid.  

 

And – what guarantee is there that link provided by the ISP will not become
unavailable, or that the data store may become inaccessible, or the managing
company may cease trading and the drives containing the backups sold (with data
on them) to the Chinese, Russians, North Koreans etc.

 

Remember any contracts will be with a non-existing company, and certainly in the
UK the liquidator has a duty to make the best recovery from the available assets
– cleaning drives cost money, and certainly they will get more for systems that
they can show are working, than for a collection of drives, server systems and
modems etc.

 

Going CLOUD has enormous risks for most organisations, and will probably require
more staff to manage the systems to address probable legal requirements.

The boss may be criminally, and financially liable for failure to be able to
produce ‘stuff’ to courts, or to show they managed data securely and safely. (UK
– fancy up to 10 years in jail and £250,000 in fines?)

 

JimB

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Andrew S. Baker
Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2014 10:21 PM
To: ntsysadm
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] Remote full computer backup to cloud

 

The client's desired plan is not going to meet their expectations.

They're aiming for a full backup, and will utterly fail to even get a partial
one.

I cannot add anything extra to what has already been suggested.

Perhaps the sheer volume of "don't try this at home" will be helpful in getting
him to go in another direction.


Regards,




 

 


ASB
 <http://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker> http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations & Information Security) for the
SMB market…

 

 

On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 3:57 PM, Art DeKneef <[email protected]> wrote:

Have a new client that wants to backup 15 computers, possibly to the cloud. The
cloud seems to be his preference right now. 7 computers are in an office with
the other 8 being laptops that rarely come into the office. There is no server
(Yeah I know), mix of Windows 7 Home and Pro, Windows 8 and Pro, varying skill
levels. They buy whatever fits their fancy and price when something breaks.
Hopefully I can get them to see the value of consistency of hardware.

 

He wants to backup the whole computer, not just the business stuff. I mentioned
a small server or NAS device for the office but that still leaves the laptops.
They use a couple of 1TB USB drives in the office now but there have been a few
instances where they haven’t worked correctly between the different computers.

 

I’m currently looking at Carbonite, Mozy, Crashplan and Copy but they all seem
to just want to backup files and folders, not the whole drive based on my first
glance.

 

Anyone have any experience backing up remote computers they would like to share
while I research some more?

 

Thanks

 

Art DeKneef

Avanti Computers

Mesa, AZ

480-649-4430 Office

480-529-4430 Mobile

 

 


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