UPDATED Google Drive users are reporting files mysteriously disappearing from the service, with some netizens on the goliath’s support forums claiming six or more months of work have unceremoniously vanished.

The issue has been rumbling for a few days, with one user logging into Google Drive and finding things as they were in May 2023.

  • @krigo666@lemmy.world
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    -121 year ago

    Have you read the Terms of Service of Google Drive for regular users?? You will give Google irrevocable and total rights on everything that is placed there for them to use as they see fit. It bewilders me how people still use that ‘service’…

      • @Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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        01 year ago

        That talks about ownership, not access. So they won’t claim they wrote the short story you uploaded. But take a look at this, “We may review content to determine whether it is illegal or violates our Program Policies, and we may remove or refuse to display content that we reasonably believe violates our policies or the law. But that does not necessarily mean that we review content, so please don’t assume that we do.”

        Are you good with Google literally telling you that they look at your content, but “please, don’t assume that they do?” If you feel they have your privacy and best interests in mind with a statement like this and they aren’t algorithmically sniffing every thing you upload, I have some extended warranty coverage I would like to sell you.

        • kae
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          21 year ago

          Yes, it talks about ownership, because the original poster talked about ownership.

          Google hosts files, and thus needs to have some semblance of control over what actually is hosted on it, or they become liable for the same content.

          Pirated material? Child pornography? etc. It all needs to be scanned and determined if it violates rights/laws and be dealt with.

          Google has always done this automatically, because the sheer scale of content they host is overwhelming.

          I totally understand the ‘own everything’ mentality that some hold. That’s fair – then host it yourself, encrypt it, and you can hold the key to your little kingdom. For most people, that isn’t a factor.

          To get back to the original claim – they don’t claim rights over what you post. It is yours. You just can’t host other people’s stuff. The definition of that is incredibly broad and largely commercial. 99% of people will never, ever run into the issue. 99% of the remaining 1% will discover it innocently (such as another poster trying to back up office). The remaining will already be versed enough to encrypt their data locally before uploading.

        • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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          61 year ago

          I know for a fact that Google scans everything, including zip files, and WILL delete things they deem a problem.

          I tried to store my own, paid for, copies of software, like office. Google deleted it. OK, I’ll zip and password protect. Nope, scanned, deleted. Never bothered trying to encrypt first, just moved on from Google.

          Now with tools like Resilio, Syncthing, and Tailscale, cloud holds little value other than backup.

            • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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              01 year ago

              I like Resilio, especially the selective sync feature. Unfortunately because it keeps the file index in ram, it kills my phone with my media share. It also uses a lot of resources on my Windows machine.

              Syncthing doesn’t have this performance hit, but… It doesn’t have selective sync.

              Sigh.

              So I use both for different purposes, with Resilio not running by default.

  • GonzoVeritas
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    1 year ago

    Google is fine for most people, but it shouldn’t be the sole backup. If you don’t have (at least) 3 separate instances of a backup, you don’t really have a reliable backup strategy. Preferably an onsite hard backup, an offsite hard backup, and a cloud backup.

    • @Salamendacious@lemmy.worldOP
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      131 year ago

      I know quite a few tech oriented people and I don’t know anyone who actually has the holy trinity of backups. I know quite a few who have physical backups at home and cloud though.

    • @theherk@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      Considering data durability for some data services are providing 11 9’s, just two of those leads to extremely high durability. So to say that is unreliable is just not reasonable. I have no problem with being risk averse but that is a bit extreme.

  • grimacefry
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    261 year ago

    I’ve used MEGA for about 6 years now, previously Dropbox. I switched after Dropbox lost over 2TB of my data.

    MEGA hasn’t lost my data but something glitched on their side and duplicated every file, and with the amount of data I had in there it wasn’t feasible to manually fix. So I had to delete everything and start again.

    I have all my cloud data stored on a NAS at home, that is backed up to a second NAS decice, a MEGA sync client running on home server keeps it all in sync to the cloud. I selectively sync folders from MEGA on different devices, or access files directly from the MEGA app when remote, or work with the local copy of my data when connected to home LAN. At least MEGA works cross platform, and MEGAcmd for Linux allows easy scripting and other automation possibilities.

    All commercial cloud storage has one major problem, your files are hostage to their increasing subscription fees (which will always increase because capitalism). e.g. I was paying $60 a year with Dropbox, if I were still using it, it would be $140 a year now - and I’d have no choice but to keep paying.

    • @grayman@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      Increasing subscription fees

      What are you talking about? The amount of storage you get increases at a higher rate than the cost. That’s what people generally require… But anyway, you sound fairly technical. Why aren’t you using S3? I’ve got hundreds of gigs backed up and it’s like $10/mo.

      • grimacefry
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        91 year ago

        I looked at S3 but I wanted easy consumer functionality like link sharing, web apps, mobile apps, desktop apps, photo management. I’m technical but I haven’t got endless time to play around with stuff I am in my 40s. I now have over 12TB of personal data (files spanning back to the 1980s).

      • lemmyvore
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        91 year ago

        Try getting something out of S3 then check the bill.

      • grimacefry
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        31 year ago

        This was in 2016. I accepted an invite to join a Dropbox Business account from my employer. This was linked to my personal account. It was early days for this at Dropbox, and there was a bug. When the accounts got linked it completely wiped my personal account.

      • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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        91 year ago

        I mean the OP is talking about the same thing happening with Google so what makes it so hard to believe?

  • Otter
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    171 year ago

    What do people use to have backups of their google drive content?

    • Extras
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      1 year ago

      I use an external hard drive for all of my cloud backups

      • Otter
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        21 year ago

        Do you have it plugged in all the time or do you periodically do a full transfer?

        • Extras
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          51 year ago

          I do weekly backups. However, if I modify or add something really important I create a backup right at that time

          • Otter
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            1 year ago

            Makes sense, I’ll have to start doing that.

            One more question out of curiosity, how do you store the drive after?

            I was thinking of getting a proper fireproof safe someday, but that might make it so I get lazy with the backups

            • Extras
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              21 year ago

              Hehe thats what I do. I keep mine in a fireproof box inside a bolted down safe.

            • @randomsnark@lemmy.ml
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              21 year ago

              When googling to find out what a word means, try adding “define” to your search. When I Google “define offsite” it works as intended.

            • Zoolander
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              51 year ago

              I think they mean “off-site”, meaning that it’s not at the same location. That way if something happens at one location, such as burglary, fire, etc., your data is still safe.

        • Neato
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          181 year ago

          Accessible from anywhere and any device. Non-local backups in case of a fire at your house and such.

        • @hakobo@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          For any really important data, you should always have at least 3 copies. 1) Your working copy on your computer. 2) A local backup which could be an external hard drive, a NAS, another computer, or whatever. 3) An off-site backup. That could be a cloud service, a computer at a friend’s or family member’s house, an external hard drive in a safety deposit box, etc. The off-site backup is in case your house burns down or is robbed.

          If it’s REALLY important, you may have even more than that. There’s also the issue of how often do you update the backups. A hard drive in a safety deposit box is hard to update compared to uploading to Google Drive which can be automatic, but the hard drive in the safety deposit box is more secure. So you have to weigh your pros and cons.

          • @Icedrous@sh.itjust.works
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            21 year ago

            Can you give me an example of what really important data could look like?

            Genuine question, I don’t work in IT or work with computers very often. I’m tech literate, but the most important thing I really have is my resume and even then I can redo it if I lost it.

            • @hakobo@lemmy.world
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              61 year ago

              For most people it will be things like tax documents, medical receipts (assuming you are in a country where that’s important), photos of kids’ life milestones, photos of family members who have passed away, copies of leases, receipts for large purchases for insurance purposes if your house burns down. Things like that. Also, if you do freelance work like web design, photography, video editing, writing, music production, game design, research, etc, you want to make sure that stuff is backed up.

    • @TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      I use rclone and a backup script to periodically download my Google drive contents to a portable external hard drive

    • @Getting6409@lemm.ee
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      21 year ago

      Backblaze B2, which I’m pretty sure is a repackaged S3 provider, or you can just skip them and go directly to AWS S3; though, both aren’t drag and drop user friendly like onedrive or gdrive. But both work well if you invest a little time with something like rclone.

      • @Chobbes@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        Backblaze B2 is S3 compatible but not built on S3. B2 is also considerably cheaper than S3, so it probably wouldn’t make sense if it was built on S3.

        • @xuv@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          51 year ago

          Correct, Backblaze is their own host and post on their blog often about their tech and processes. They’ve got a lot of good info on how they designed their server storage racks and stats on drive failures by brand etc

        • @Getting6409@lemm.ee
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          21 year ago

          Thanks, I was wondering why the s3 prefixes were used. If my memory serves, b2 is especially better on the billing rates for retrieval, so a better choice if large disaster recovery is on your mind.

  • Radioactive Radio
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    121 year ago

    Imagine losing your beloved dog’s last photos just cuz you decided to back them up onto someone else’s computer.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    61 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Google Drive users are reporting files mysteriously disappearing from the service, with some posters on the company’s support forums claiming six or more months of work have unceremoniously vanished.

    There is little information regarding what has happened; some users reported that synchronization had simply stopped working, so the cloud storage was out of date.

    Others could get some of their information back by fiddling with cached files, although the limited advice on offer for the affected was to leave things well alone until engineers come up with a solution.

    A message purporting to be from Google support also advised not to make changes to the root/data folder while engineers investigat the issue.

    European cloud hosting provider OVH suffered a disastrous fire in 2021 that left some customers scrambling for backups and disaster recovery plans.

    Earlier in 2023, the company’s europe-west9 region took a shower after water made its presence felt inside a Parisian Google Cloud datacenter.


    The original article contains 342 words, the summary contains 156 words. Saved 54%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!