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Over the years, I've occasionally had to retrieve data from backups I've made to CD or DVD.
All these backup media were burned with extra care (at low speeds, not always with high-end media but never with the cheapest crap either) and almost always with the burning program's double-check option turned on.
However, every time I had to search through some CDs or DVDs a couple of years later, there were shockingly many occurrences of data corruption on a shockingly high number of the media.
I managed to work around the corruptions so no serious damage was done (as they would usually span only across a few sectors, or whatever they are called on CDs/dvds), but is this a normal rate of decay for CDs/DVDs? Does the storage method influence the media's longevity? I usually store them in soft plastic pouches. Could chemicals permeating from those pouches be the problem?
- Is there a way to prevent decay of CDs/DVDs? Is this a brand issue, with cheap media decaying faster?
1I'm not completely sure whether this is on topic on SU in this form - if you think it isn't, and think this can be improved, please let me know! – Pekka – 2012-06-03T16:57:19.907
I think there is no way to prevent them break just care them as much as you can. If you really want to backup the stuff then
2-3 TB
external HDD is a good option. – avirk – 2012-06-03T17:01:03.5104Yes, it is normal. You cannot do much more than storing them in a cool dark dry place and copying the data to fresh disks every 3-5 years – Akash – 2012-06-03T17:01:13.883
@avirk I would imagine a HDD's motors,etc will jam up in a decade or so. A SSD may be a better choice, but will still need to be rewritten every few years – Akash – 2012-06-03T17:03:38.593
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@Pekka: Your two questions (about CDs and cloud storage) are pretty unrelated, and both were discussed here on su.com... For example: http://superuser.com/questions/251369/what-is-the-lifespan-of-dvd-and-blu-ray-discs (there are other similar topics)
– haimg – 2012-06-03T17:03:56.780@Akash Yes it can be. But as I'm using SSD and an external HDD form a decade still haven't problem. But it could be a bad luck though when you lost the data. – avirk – 2012-06-03T17:06:10.273
@haimg I'm not asking about cloud storage, but backup methods without cloud storage. I agree it's a separate question though, and it's been asked e.g. here: http://superuser.com/questions/31182/long-term-backup-storage-media. Thanks for the link, but I feel it's not a duplicate - it deals with the theoretical lifespan of the various media types, while mine is about slow decay that happens much earlier
– Pekka – 2012-06-03T17:06:14.4031@avirk if you are using it for a decade you have a better chance of it working than if you used it, kept it away for a decade and came back.Same for SSD's, the data decays after 1-10 years depending on the type of cell used in it – Akash – 2012-06-03T17:09:01.110
1@Akash roger that Sir. ;) – avirk – 2012-06-03T17:10:48.800
Use archival grade CD/DVD's, the best use real gold, not cheap either. I gave up on optical discs for long term storage, moved to hard drives, I upgrade my drives about every 3 years and keep duplicates of critical files on more than one hard drive. Cloud storage is becoming cheap, and will get cheaper, might be a third place to store super critical files. – Moab – 2012-06-03T17:27:57.903
@Moab cool, thanks - didn't know archival grade CDs/DVDs existed! The whole of your comment would make a worthy answer IMO – Pekka – 2012-06-03T17:37:47.050