Why not use your spare local storage for your own backups? Same reason you’d incorporate any cloud option into your backup plan: protection against fire, flood, theft, and other localized disasters. This is, the company says, “more redundant and secure than the centralized data center approach,” which is used by pretty much every other cloud service (Dropbox, Google Drive, etc.). Symform addresses these and other worthwhile questions on its FAQ page, but I’ll give you a quick summary: The service employs 256-bit AES encryption to keep data secure and relies on a specialized storage architecture to prevent data loss. First, what about security? Second, what happens if someone’s system is down? Does that mean your data is unavailable? So, wait a sec, you’re basically agreeing to store your data on other users’ hard drives? That sounds insane on a couple levels.
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