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    AWS Catastrophic Data Loss

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    • PhlipElderP
      PhlipElder @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

      @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

      @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

      This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

      A few things come to mind:
      1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
      2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
      3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

      Microsoft's central US DC failure, I think it was last year or early this year, cause a substantial amount of data loss as well. Not sure if any HA setup could have saved them from what I recall.

      How many people backup their O365 systems? I am willing to bet VERY few!! yet, if MS were to have the same issue, customers would find themselves in a similar situation.

      One (invalid) claim I see from time to time when migrating to the cloud - it saves money because backups are part of the solution... which we can see here is definitely not the case.

      Veeam was one of the first ones on the block to back up O365. That's messaging that Microsoft has not made clear but I've seen in the grapevine as far as the customer being responsible to do so.

      No. My sh#t on their sh#t means no sh#t if something takes a sh#t. 😛

      dafyreD IRJI DashrenderD 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • IRJI
        IRJ @PhlipElder
        last edited by

        @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

        @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

        This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

        A few things come to mind:
        1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
        2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
        3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

        Very valid points, but that is the responsibility of the customer.
        Let's look at IaaS (EC2 instances loses EBS volumes after power outage) vs a cloud hosted service like Office 365.

        Services are supposed to have HA built into them. Infrastructure has no HA built into it.

        377852d9-4d16-46f9-8d21-efadd0a3c1a7-image.png

        As you mentioned, DATA is ALWAYS responsibility of the customer.

        PhlipElderP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • dafyreD
          dafyre @PhlipElder
          last edited by

          @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

          No. My sh#t on their sh#t means no sh#t if something takes a sh#t.

          I'm totally stealing this! ROFL!

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • IRJI
            IRJ @PhlipElder
            last edited by

            @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

            Veeam was one of the first ones on the block to back up O365. That's messaging that Microsoft has not made clear but I've seen in the grapevine as far as the customer being responsible to do so.

            Customer is always responsible for data.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • PhlipElderP
              PhlipElder @IRJ
              last edited by

              @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

              @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

              @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

              This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

              A few things come to mind:
              1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
              2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
              3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

              Very valid points, but that is the responsibility of the customer.
              Let's look at IaaS (EC2 instances loses EBS volumes after power outage) vs a cloud hosted service like Office 365.

              Services are supposed to have HA built into them. Infrastructure has no HA built into it.

              377852d9-4d16-46f9-8d21-efadd0a3c1a7-image.png

              As you mentioned, DATA is ALWAYS responsibility of the customer.

              One wee problem: Many "cloud" providers provide absolutely no mechanism to get the data out. Or, in some cases if it can be, it's not in usable form.

              IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • IRJI
                IRJ @PhlipElder
                last edited by IRJ

                @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                A few things come to mind:
                1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                Very valid points, but that is the responsibility of the customer.
                Let's look at IaaS (EC2 instances loses EBS volumes after power outage) vs a cloud hosted service like Office 365.

                Services are supposed to have HA built into them. Infrastructure has no HA built into it.

                377852d9-4d16-46f9-8d21-efadd0a3c1a7-image.png

                As you mentioned, DATA is ALWAYS responsibility of the customer.

                One wee problem: Many "cloud" providers provide absolutely no mechanism to get the data out. Or, in some cases if it can be, it's not in usable form.

                That is actually one of the biggest things you look at before chosing a vendor. If you do any cloud training, you will hear about data and data all over again. Being able to export it in a valuable way is essential for on prem or cloud though. If you cant export on prem and use the data in a usuable way into another system, you have the same problem.

                wrx7mW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • IRJI
                  IRJ
                  last edited by

                  For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                  PhlipElderP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • wrx7mW
                    wrx7m @PhlipElder
                    last edited by

                    @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                    @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                    This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                    A few things come to mind:
                    1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                    2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                    3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                    Microsoft's central US DC failure, I think it was last year or early this year, cause a substantial amount of data loss as well. Not sure if any HA setup could have saved them from what I recall.

                    1. Just because you don't know how to do it or that you are supposed to do it, doesn't mean it isn't your responsibility.
                    2. Depends on the services. That should also be factored into the cost of deployment.
                    3. Absolutely correct. If it is important, it should be backed up by the customer. The customer should also make sure that they are storing said backups in a way that can't be affected by issues that would also cause data to be lost in the production environment.
                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • PhlipElderP
                      PhlipElder @IRJ
                      last edited by

                      @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                      For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                      I feel like I'm back in the early 2000s when Microsoft released Small Business Server 2000 then Small Business Server 2003 with the business owner DIY message. We got a lot of calls as a result of that messaging over the years.

                      Then, there was the mess created by the "IT Consultant" that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground. We cleaned up a lot of those over the years.

                      At least in the above cases we could work with some sort of box to get their data on a roll.

                      Today, that possibility is virtually nil.

                      That is, the business owner being knowledgeable enough to navigate the spaghetti of cloud services setup to get to a point where they are secure and backed up for one. For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                      Then, toss into the mix the message about speed and agility and we have a deadly mix beyond the SBS messaging and failures in that we're talking orders of magnitude more folks losing their businesses as a result of one big FUBAR.

                      Ever been on the back of a bike holding a case of beer while the "driver" hit 200+ KPH? I have. Once. And lived to never, ever, ever, trust an arse like that again.

                      FATeknollogeeF IRJI 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • wrx7mW
                        wrx7m @IRJ
                        last edited by

                        @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                        @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                        @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                        @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                        @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                        This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                        A few things come to mind:
                        1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                        2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                        3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                        Very valid points, but that is the responsibility of the customer.
                        Let's look at IaaS (EC2 instances loses EBS volumes after power outage) vs a cloud hosted service like Office 365.

                        Services are supposed to have HA built into them. Infrastructure has no HA built into it.

                        377852d9-4d16-46f9-8d21-efadd0a3c1a7-image.png

                        As you mentioned, DATA is ALWAYS responsibility of the customer.

                        One wee problem: Many "cloud" providers provide absolutely no mechanism to get the data out. Or, in some cases if it can be, it's not in usable form.

                        That is actually one of the biggest things you look at before chosing a vendor. If you do any cloud training, you will hear about data and data all over again. Being able to export it in a valuable way is essential for on prem or cloud though. If you cant export on prem and use the data in a usuable way into another system, you have the same problem.

                        Exactly. Are you going to be trapped there because you can't get data migrated/transferred out to another service/platform? A lot of people don't think about this. These people should not be making the decisions to go with any vendor without knowing what questions to ask and how to use those answers to make decisions. Sadly, most don't know until it bites them in the ass.

                        PhlipElderP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • PhlipElderP
                          PhlipElder @wrx7m
                          last edited by

                          @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                          This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                          A few things come to mind:
                          1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                          2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                          3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                          Very valid points, but that is the responsibility of the customer.
                          Let's look at IaaS (EC2 instances loses EBS volumes after power outage) vs a cloud hosted service like Office 365.

                          Services are supposed to have HA built into them. Infrastructure has no HA built into it.

                          377852d9-4d16-46f9-8d21-efadd0a3c1a7-image.png

                          As you mentioned, DATA is ALWAYS responsibility of the customer.

                          One wee problem: Many "cloud" providers provide absolutely no mechanism to get the data out. Or, in some cases if it can be, it's not in usable form.

                          That is actually one of the biggest things you look at before chosing a vendor. If you do any cloud training, you will hear about data and data all over again. Being able to export it in a valuable way is essential for on prem or cloud though. If you cant export on prem and use the data in a usuable way into another system, you have the same problem.

                          Exactly. Are you going to be trapped there because you can't get data migrated/transferred out to another service/platform? A lot of people don't think about this. These people should not be making the decisions to go with any vendor without knowing what questions to ask and how to use those answers to make decisions. Sadly, most don't know until it bites them in the ass.

                          That's because most outside of our little tech bubble don't know what they want or what can bite them in the arse. I'm thinking of a video I saw a while back. SE Asia I think. Folks like me would wear steal toed boots while the locals knew where to look. Snake would jump out along the path to bite someone. Scared the carp out of me the first time I watched that.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • FATeknollogeeF
                            FATeknollogee @PhlipElder
                            last edited by

                            @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                            @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                            For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                            I feel like I'm back in the early 2000s when Microsoft released Small Business Server 2000 then Small Business Server 2003 with the business owner DIY message. We got a lot of calls as a result of that messaging over the years.

                            Then, there was the mess created by the "IT Consultant" that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground. We cleaned up a lot of those over the years.

                            At least in the above cases we could work with some sort of box to get their data on a roll.

                            Today, that possibility is virtually nil.

                            That is, the business owner being knowledgeable enough to navigate the spaghetti of cloud services setup to get to a point where they are secure and backed up for one. For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                            Then, toss into the mix the message about speed and agility and we have a deadly mix beyond the SBS messaging and failures in that we're talking orders of magnitude more folks losing their businesses as a result of one big FUBAR.

                            Ever been on the back of a bike holding a case of beer while the "driver" hit 200+ KPH? I have. Once. And lived to never, ever, ever, trust an arse like that again.

                            The powerful power of marketing
                            Cloud = :couple_with_heart: 💕 💌 :kissing_face_with_smiling_eyes: :kissing_cat_face_with_closed_eyes: 🥂

                            PhlipElderP IRJI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • PhlipElderP
                              PhlipElder @FATeknollogee
                              last edited by

                              @FATeknollogee said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                              @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                              @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                              For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                              I feel like I'm back in the early 2000s when Microsoft released Small Business Server 2000 then Small Business Server 2003 with the business owner DIY message. We got a lot of calls as a result of that messaging over the years.

                              Then, there was the mess created by the "IT Consultant" that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground. We cleaned up a lot of those over the years.

                              At least in the above cases we could work with some sort of box to get their data on a roll.

                              Today, that possibility is virtually nil.

                              That is, the business owner being knowledgeable enough to navigate the spaghetti of cloud services setup to get to a point where they are secure and backed up for one. For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                              Then, toss into the mix the message about speed and agility and we have a deadly mix beyond the SBS messaging and failures in that we're talking orders of magnitude more folks losing their businesses as a result of one big FUBAR.

                              Ever been on the back of a bike holding a case of beer while the "driver" hit 200+ KPH? I have. Once. And lived to never, ever, ever, trust an arse like that again.

                              The powerful power of marketing
                              Cloud = :couple_with_heart: 💕 💌 :kissing_face_with_smiling_eyes: :kissing_cat_face_with_closed_eyes: 🥂

                              Yes.

                              The The Great Firewall of Marketing has prevented most of the negative stuff from surfacing.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • IRJI
                                IRJ @PhlipElder
                                last edited by

                                @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                                I feel like I'm back in the early 2000s when Microsoft released Small Business Server 2000 then Small Business Server 2003 with the business owner DIY message. We got a lot of calls as a result of that messaging over the years.

                                Then, there was the mess created by the "IT Consultant" that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground. We cleaned up a lot of those over the years.

                                At least in the above cases we could work with some sort of box to get their data on a roll.

                                Today, that possibility is virtually nil.

                                That is, the business owner being knowledgeable enough to navigate the spaghetti of cloud services setup to get to a point where they are secure and backed up for one. For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                                Then, toss into the mix the message about speed and agility and we have a deadly mix beyond the SBS messaging and failures in that we're talking orders of magnitude more folks losing their businesses as a result of one big FUBAR.

                                Ever been on the back of a bike holding a case of beer while the "driver" hit 200+ KPH? I have. Once. And lived to never, ever, ever, trust an arse like that again.

                                Cloud is alot more secure than on prem when done right.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • IRJI
                                  IRJ @PhlipElder
                                  last edited by IRJ

                                  @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                  For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                                  That's why the cloud guys make the :money_bag: :money_bag: :money_bag: :money_bag:

                                  Cloud isn't even that difficult. Most could learn the basic concepts in an hour or two.

                                  PhlipElderP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • IRJI
                                    IRJ @FATeknollogee
                                    last edited by

                                    @FATeknollogee said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                    @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                    @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                    For IaaS, using a tool like terraform can help you transition from one platform to another as terraform is compatible with many cloud hosts.

                                    I feel like I'm back in the early 2000s when Microsoft released Small Business Server 2000 then Small Business Server 2003 with the business owner DIY message. We got a lot of calls as a result of that messaging over the years.

                                    Then, there was the mess created by the "IT Consultant" that didn't know their butt from a hole in the ground. We cleaned up a lot of those over the years.

                                    At least in the above cases we could work with some sort of box to get their data on a roll.

                                    Today, that possibility is virtually nil.

                                    That is, the business owner being knowledgeable enough to navigate the spaghetti of cloud services setup to get to a point where they are secure and backed up for one. For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                                    Then, toss into the mix the message about speed and agility and we have a deadly mix beyond the SBS messaging and failures in that we're talking orders of magnitude more folks losing their businesses as a result of one big FUBAR.

                                    Ever been on the back of a bike holding a case of beer while the "driver" hit 200+ KPH? I have. Once. And lived to never, ever, ever, trust an arse like that again.

                                    The powerful power of marketing
                                    Cloud = :couple_with_heart: 💕 💌 :kissing_face_with_smiling_eyes: :kissing_cat_face_with_closed_eyes: 🥂

                                    Your understanding of cloud is quite exquisite

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • PhlipElderP
                                      PhlipElder @IRJ
                                      last edited by

                                      @IRJ said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                      @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                      For another, as mentioned above, how many folks know how to set up any cloud?

                                      That's why the cloud guys make the :money_bag: :money_bag: :money_bag: :money_bag:

                                      Cloud isn't even that difficult. Most could learn the basic concepts in an hour or two.

                                      Like I said, our tech bubble.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @PhlipElder
                                        last edited by

                                        @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                        @Dashrender said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                        @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                        @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                        This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                                        A few things come to mind:
                                        1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                                        2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                                        3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                                        Microsoft's central US DC failure, I think it was last year or early this year, cause a substantial amount of data loss as well. Not sure if any HA setup could have saved them from what I recall.

                                        How many people backup their O365 systems? I am willing to bet VERY few!! yet, if MS were to have the same issue, customers would find themselves in a similar situation.

                                        One (invalid) claim I see from time to time when migrating to the cloud - it saves money because backups are part of the solution... which we can see here is definitely not the case.

                                        Veeam was one of the first ones on the block to back up O365. That's messaging that Microsoft has not made clear but I've seen in the grapevine as far as the customer being responsible to do so.

                                        No. My sh#t on their sh#t means no sh#t if something takes a sh#t. 😛

                                        This is a discussion that @scottalanmiller has been asked about before and I could have sworn that for the most part - he was against the need to specifically backup O365.

                                        PhlipElderP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • PhlipElderP
                                          PhlipElder @Dashrender
                                          last edited by

                                          @Dashrender said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                          @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                          @Dashrender said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                          @PhlipElder said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                          @wrx7m said in AWS Catastrophic Data Loss:

                                          This was one AZ, right? If so, you need to design your environment to span multiple AZs, if not regions. This is beginner AWS design theory.

                                          A few things come to mind:
                                          1: Just how many folks know how to architect a highly available solution in any cloud?
                                          2: At what cost over and above the indicated method does the HA setup incur?
                                          3: It does not matter where the data is, it should be backed up.

                                          Microsoft's central US DC failure, I think it was last year or early this year, cause a substantial amount of data loss as well. Not sure if any HA setup could have saved them from what I recall.

                                          How many people backup their O365 systems? I am willing to bet VERY few!! yet, if MS were to have the same issue, customers would find themselves in a similar situation.

                                          One (invalid) claim I see from time to time when migrating to the cloud - it saves money because backups are part of the solution... which we can see here is definitely not the case.

                                          Veeam was one of the first ones on the block to back up O365. That's messaging that Microsoft has not made clear but I've seen in the grapevine as far as the customer being responsible to do so.

                                          No. My sh#t on their sh#t means no sh#t if something takes a sh#t. 😛

                                          This is a discussion that @scottalanmiller has been asked about before and I could have sworn that for the most part - he was against the need to specifically backup O365.

                                          The prototype of the current model, IMO, was explained by the Exchange Team at the first Microsoft Exchange Conference that I attended back when.

                                          They dogfooded 400 mailboxes using a distributed model with Exchange 2013 non-production bits. No backups. There were a few surprised looks in the room when that was announced.

                                          The G00g demonstrated quite clearly what happens when the distributed model fails some years ago by losing mailboxes (a client of ours was affected by that - lost their entire business continuity).

                                          I wish I could say I could count on one hand the number of times I've dealt with a, "Help! My server crashed and we don't have any backups". But not.

                                          Oh, and Maersk nearly effed themselves if it weren't for an offline DC in Africa. I think it was Ghana thinking their distributed domain would withstand anything. Until they were encrypted with no DC backups. Anywhere. SMH

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DashrenderD
                                            Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            as I understand it - MS has backups, but they are only used by MS when they have a major issue and they need to restore that - like a lost DC or something.

                                            BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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