Tag: Data Archive

  • Why Offsite Vaults Still Exist in the Age of Cloud Storage

    Cloud storage changed a lot, but it did not eliminate the need for offsite vaulting. In some cases, it made the contrast clearer.

    An offsite vault is a secure storage facility for tapes, records, and other media. Its job is simple: protect recovery copies away from the primary site. That protects against building-level incidents, local disasters, theft, and operational mistakes.

    Why companies still use vaults

    • Air gap. Physical media stored offline cannot be compromised the same way online systems can.
    • Chain of custody. For regulated industries and litigation, physical control and documented handling still matter.
    • Geographic separation. A backup in the same building is not true offsite protection.
    • Retention discipline. Vaulting reinforces structured backup and archive processes.

    In plain English, the vault is about survivability. It is part storage, part logistics, part governance.

    What the process can look like

    In a classic model, a backup job runs, data is written to tape, the media is labeled, and a records-management provider picks it up for transport and vault storage. If the business needs the media later, it requests retrieval and restoration.

    That system may sound old-fashioned, but it solves a very modern problem: making sure the recovery copy is not sitting in the same blast radius as production.

    Cloud is not the same as vaulting

    Cloud can be excellent for backup and archive, but it does not automatically equal air-gapped, geographically independent, operationally tested recovery. Businesses still have to think through identity risk, ransomware risk, retention settings, and restore speed.

    This is why mature environments often use layered protection rather than one answer. Fast restores may happen from disk or cloud. Long-term or offline recovery may still rely on tape and vaulting.

    If you want the simpler infrastructure foundation first, start with this explanation of LTO tape.

    And if you are thinking strategically, the most interesting question is no longer just where the archive sits. It is whether the organization can eventually unlock what is stored there. That is the bigger bridge from legacy storage to modern analytics and AI.

  • Backup vs. Archive vs. Disaster Recovery: What’s the Difference?

    These terms get mixed together constantly, but they are not the same thing.

    Backup is about making a copy of active data so it can be restored if something goes wrong. Archive is about keeping data for the long term, usually because it still has legal, historical, or business value. Disaster recovery is the broader plan for getting systems and operations back after a serious disruption.

    Backup

    Backups are operational. They protect the current state of your systems. If a user deletes a file, a server fails, or ransomware hits, backups are what give you a recovery point.

    Backups are usually frequent, versioned, and tied to a recovery goal. They answer questions like:

    • How much data can we afford to lose?
    • How quickly do we need to recover?

    Archive

    Archive is different. Archived data is typically not needed every day. It is retained because it may matter later: for litigation, audits, compliance, customer history, financial records, or institutional memory.

    Archive storage is optimized for retention and cost, not speed. That is why tape, cold storage, and deep archive services still matter.

    Disaster recovery

    Disaster recovery includes backup, but it goes beyond backup. It covers the systems, processes, locations, and timelines required to restore business operations after a major incident.

    A real disaster recovery plan asks:

    • Where are our recovery copies stored?
    • Are they offline or immutable?
    • Who is responsible for recovery?
    • How long will restoration take?
    • What happens if the primary site is unavailable?

    Why the distinction matters

    When companies blur these categories, they often think they are more protected than they really are. They may have backups but no tested disaster recovery process. Or they may have archives but no fast recovery path. Or they may be holding years of data without any practical way to search or use it.

    That last point is especially important. There is a huge difference between storing data and activating it.

    If you are still getting familiar with the infrastructure layer, start with this primer on LTO tape and why it still matters.

    And if your organization has years of historical information trapped in backups and archives, the next step is not just protection. It is accessibility. Here is how businesses can move from tape to AI-ready data.