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What brand are you using? I'll stay away from them. I have had good luck so far with Western Digital. I run health checks on them regularly. RAID will eliminate problems of single dsik failure but not of a location based failure such as a house fire. IMHO cloud backup is best for piece of mind.
I just had a Western Digital 2TB external drive go bad after using it only 3 times as a off site backup. After getting on the phone with WD support, they admit that is was also a bad drive, and I'm getting an exchange under warranty. I'm going to get another drive (non Western Digital) to have a back up of my backup in case the replacement WD fails. I'm not going to buy Western Digital drives anymore.I'm using 2 3TB Segate Barracuda drives with my Synology NAS, that seem to be reliable.
I keep more than one backup for my music. Perhaps I should for my computer data as well.For music, I've been using LaCie drives, which have performed well to date.
Large storage devices (1, 2 or more TBites) have multiple discs as well as multiple readers and suspensions. This all increases the odds of failure. While it is convenient to have large storage devices, the failure risk does increase because of the very reason I mentioned. The more dingle-berries, the higher the odds of failure.One solution: smaller storage devices (1T or less) or several backups......
If they're all striped as RAID 0, sure. But RAID 1 mirrors the data across two drives, requiring both to fail simultaneously, and RAID 5 would require at least two drives in the array to fail (and the array is still operable with one failed drive).The Wiki page on RAID has an excellent writeup on this, as well as the logical equations for failure rate with N number of drives.
Looks like the both Seagate and Western Digtial have issues now.https://www.backblaze.com/blog/hard-drive-reliability-update-september-2014/Hitachi is now owned by Western Digital so who know what will happen to those drives from a reliability perspective. More reason to use RAID and/or the cloud for backup.It you have multiple machines with free space on the hard drives you can use Crash Plan to back them up to each other.
I absolutely refuse to store any of my data on the cloud. I have as little other data (such as email) on the cloud as possible. It's incredibly easy for people to steal your information. Instead, I have an unraid server and two backups. One backup I keep out of the house.