==== Borg ==== I use Borg for my current active backup on my laptop. Since the laptop is only schoolwork, there isn't a ton of other files to copy. Borg has a few cool features: * Incremental backups only copy the differences * Ability to mount the backups easily for recovery For my desktop, I use good old tar files generally for system setup. All important data on this system is generally copied to one of many external drives. I used to use Syncthing, to sync files across my systems. I later switched to unison over ssh through my own VPN. I now just use rsync for simplicity and speed. I have various drives, some old, some new holding backups. Critical things like family documents are redundant on my drive, at least 2 externals, and an encrypted copy on Backblaze B2. Old drives with bad partitions are generally retired and become permanent backups after I load an important collection and leave it. I try to power them up twice a year to ensure they still work. I use PAR2 to create parity files. I do this for both TAR and ZPAQ. I have 2 options: use files/folders and if bitrot happens, only lose 1 file, or use archives/containers, where bitrot can kill everything. However, using parity with 5% prevention should be enough to protect the entire archive. If I have to encrypt anything, I use AES256 with GPG. If there is a fault in AES, lets be real, everyone will be screwed anyways.