You found the backup wrap up your go-to podcast for all things
Speaker:backup recovery and cyber recovery.
Speaker:In this episode, we're talking about something that might make
Speaker:you a little uncomfortable.
Speaker:The idea that dis backups for all their benefits actually created
Speaker:a massive security problem that we're still dealing with today.
Speaker:I remember when we moved from tape to disk and it was amazing,
Speaker:but disk backup security wasn't actually part of the original design.
Speaker:Those backups sitting in ecolon slash backups.
Speaker:A threat actor can access them and delete them with one command persona.
Speaker:And I explained why this happened, and most importantly,
Speaker:what you can do about it today.
Speaker:By the way, if you don't know who I am, I'm w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr. Backup,
Speaker:and I've been passionate about backup and recovery ever since I had to tell my boss.
Speaker:That there were no backups of that production database that we just lost.
Speaker:I don't want that to happen to you, and that's why I do this.
Speaker:Uh uh, on this podcast, we turn unappreciated backup admins
Speaker:into Cyber Recovery Heroes.
Speaker:This is the backup wrap up.
Speaker:Welcome to the backup wrap up.
Speaker:I'm your host, w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr. Backup, and I have with me persona.
Speaker:I don't need no tape.
Speaker:Maldi, how's it going?
Speaker:Persona.
Speaker:I'm good.
Speaker:You know.
Speaker:don't think it's, I don't need no tape.
Speaker:I think it is.
Speaker:What's tape Malaiyandi,
Speaker:Yeah, you've,
Speaker:a VHS tape, right?
Speaker:Or a cassette
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Linear tape.
Speaker:Open my friend.
Speaker:Digital data storage.
Speaker:Uh, exabyte.
Speaker:8,200.
Speaker:By the way, exabyte best named company in the history of naming
Speaker:companies, and it's not anymore.
Speaker:I wonder what happens,
Speaker:to Xite?
Speaker:not that company, exabyte.
Speaker:Someone must have bought that name.
Speaker:Well, surely, but
Speaker:surely.
Speaker:on.
Speaker:sir. I know what you mean.
Speaker:So Exabyte.
Speaker:It's interesting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So some company, oh, a premium domain exclusively for sale
Speaker:on the brand bucket network.
Speaker:Guess how much it is?
Speaker:$150,000.
Speaker:$212,000.
Speaker:And I just made it 300 based on my comment.
Speaker:Yeah, so Exabyte was a, a tape drive manufacturer back in the day.
Speaker:Um, and it was the first tape drives, well, technically the second
Speaker:tape drive that I cut my teeth on.
Speaker:I also worked on quick drives, which were QIC, which were not quick.
Speaker:Um, the, they were actually quite slow, but
Speaker:grandpa's talking about tape again.
Speaker:Um, but you know what?
Speaker:The, the reason why we're having this conversation, like, and, and
Speaker:you know, and this isn't like a, we should all go back to tape episode,
Speaker:but I think it's one of those I think we should at least acknowledge.
Speaker:We, we can acknowledge the good that disk has done and it has done more
Speaker:good than harm, but it definitely, at least in one area has done harm.
Speaker:Um, so let, lemme just, um.
Speaker:Hang on.
Speaker:But, but, but, but,
Speaker:what,
Speaker:but,
Speaker:I'm gonna go back.
Speaker:I'm gonna, but we, we'll get to the
Speaker:no, no.
Speaker:button in a minute.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:but no, continue.
Speaker:Oh, okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So I think that for the modern audience, grandpa does need
Speaker:to explain tape a little bit.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Um, because tape, tape was not perfect.
Speaker:There's a reason that, that the world went to disk as a primary
Speaker:backup and recovery target, right?
Speaker:But it also had a lot of good about it, right?
Speaker:And, and also it was not as bad as people thought it was, et cetera,
Speaker:et cetera, et cetera, right?
Speaker:And, and by the way, more tape is sold today than ever before.
Speaker:So that's, uh, that is a fact.
Speaker:But let's just go back to the.
Speaker:Back before disk based backups were a thing.
Speaker:By the way, at one point everybody did backups with tape.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And then at some point there was a company who tried to address the
Speaker:challenges that we had with tape by putting disk in front of the tape system.
Speaker:that,
Speaker:What,
Speaker:the challenges are
Speaker:well, hang on, just, I'm just gonna say this.
Speaker:I'm gonna finish this.
Speaker:Who, who was that company?
Speaker:And they were, we said they were crazy.
Speaker:IBM.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:IBM Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Anyway.
Speaker:Alright, so, yeah, so basically a tape drive, you know, you, you
Speaker:have a, you have a tape, right?
Speaker:And you have a tape drive that lays the data down magnetically
Speaker:on the, on the tape, right?
Speaker:strip, right?
Speaker:And it's like a physical strip that
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So you have two different kinds of tapes.
Speaker:You have cassettes and you have, uh, cartridges.
Speaker:So a cassette for, for those of us that remember cassette tapes, right?
Speaker:So a cassette tape, a lit. Technically a lot of people are like, oh,
Speaker:well, you mean like cassette tapes?
Speaker:Like, you know, like I had of my cassette tape player.
Speaker:Like
Speaker:So a cassette tape literally means a tape with two spools.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But most modern tape drives are what we call cartridge tapes, which means
Speaker:that they just have one spool, okay?
Speaker:And the way a cassette tape works is the tape stays entirely inside the the box.
Speaker:I'm making a really, that's the biggest cassette tape, actually.
Speaker:V-C-R-V-C-R would be a cassette tape, right?
Speaker:The tape stays in entirely inside the box, and it just goes
Speaker:from one spool to the other.
Speaker:Spool.
Speaker:A cartridge tape, like LTO is a single spool, and the tape is
Speaker:pulled entirely out of the, the, the cartridge and spooled onto another
Speaker:device for use, and then it, and then it's pulled back into the cartridge.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, there are also two ways of writing the data on the tape because, um.
Speaker:One thing that is important to understand about tape and this'll,
Speaker:this'll come to resurface, and that is that in order to get a good signal
Speaker:to noise ratio, which you'd need, you need a good signal to noise ratio in
Speaker:order to reliably write the data to.
Speaker:To tape, right, to a magnetic media.
Speaker:Uh, the tape head has to be going very quickly across the medium, right?
Speaker:Uh, the, the tape, right?
Speaker:And there are two ways that we make that happen.
Speaker:With a cassette tape system like the Exabyte 8,200 a IT, which is the
Speaker:most, probably the most modern, um, system that was a cassette system.
Speaker:It's a helical recording.
Speaker:The, there's a drum that's slanted and it spins, and the tape is
Speaker:pulled slowly across that slanted head and it writes slanted.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Stripes across the, the tape?
Speaker:an angle.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:At an angle.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, um, and the tape is actually going pretty slow and it's the head that's
Speaker:spinning, that's going very fast.
Speaker:The industry pretty much gave up on that design for whatever reason.
Speaker:And they went with the, linear type tape where you have a, a stationary head.
Speaker:And, um, and then it goes, the, the tape is pulled very quickly
Speaker:across that head in order to get that high signal to noise ratio.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, but unfortunately that came with a side effect that the tape
Speaker:was not great at going slow.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, that you,
Speaker:do, how do you define fast and slow?
Speaker:Because I think people probably don't have a notion
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:relative speeds of these,
Speaker:Great question.
Speaker:So in terms of megabytes per second,
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:um, that, uh, like a modern LTO 10, which just started shipping,
Speaker:wants a gigabyte a second, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and, and back when I was dealing with things like, it was like we
Speaker:were talking like 15 megabytes a second, 30 megabytes per second.
Speaker:And the numbers just, the problem is, in order to get the tapes bigger, you
Speaker:put the bits closer together on tape,
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:as the bits got closer together on tape, the tape got faster.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And so, and, but the problem is as the tapes got faster and faster,
Speaker:the ability to give data to the tape was what didn't get faster.
Speaker:And so you got this.
Speaker:fire hose to feed it?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you couldn't, you couldn't do it.
Speaker:You, you, you know, you needed a fire hose and what you got was
Speaker:a, you know, a bathroom faucet.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and, um, so.
Speaker:You had this fundamental mismatch between the ability of the tape
Speaker:drive to go needing to go fast.
Speaker:It couldn't go slow again.
Speaker:It had to go fast because of the signal to noise ratio.
Speaker:And so it couldn't slow down.
Speaker:Uh, if it slowed down, you get a low signal to noise ratio.
Speaker:well,
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:tape drives do have a low speed, right?
Speaker:so they have a low war speed,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:but that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:not that low,
Speaker:It's
Speaker:right?
Speaker:There's just a
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:that?
Speaker:It's not like a megabyte a
Speaker:No, like in the case of LTO 10, it's probably 500 megabytes per second.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Which is still really fast.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And also when you, when you, um, when you match that with the.
Speaker:Type of backups we were doing, most backups are incremental backups.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Which supply like a megabyte every minute, right?
Speaker:You're, you're scrolling through the file system trying to find files or
Speaker:blocks that need to be backed up.
Speaker:You're not concerned with how many of them, uh, you know, right.
Speaker:So you, you had this fundamental mismatch between what was happening
Speaker:on the supply side and what was needed on, on the drive side.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And when you have that, you end up doing the shoe shining thing where you're,
Speaker:the tape is going back and forth to try to keep up with this slow, uh, speed.
Speaker:It, it cannot, literally cannot write slow.
Speaker:So what it's doing is it's, it's like imagine a car.
Speaker:Imagine trying to put people into a car that only knows
Speaker:how to go 60 miles an hour.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And what it's doing it, it's going up to 60 and then, you know, you're
Speaker:throwing people in the car and then it's backing up and you know, it, it is
Speaker:just crazy what it, what it was doing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It was wearing out the tape.
Speaker:It was wearing out the drive.
Speaker:It was making the drive unreliable.
Speaker:And so,
Speaker:Everyone complained.
Speaker:Everyone complained and we started, uh, looking at a way to use disk
Speaker:as a way to ameliorate that issue.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Which goes back to your thing about IBM at the start
Speaker:Yeah, exactly right.
Speaker:And IBM was the, uh, the first company with what was originally called A DSM.
Speaker:Uh, and then it became called TSM, and now it's called Spectrum Protect.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, that this idea of disk staging.
Speaker:So we're gonna put the, we're gonna do all those incremental backups and
Speaker:put them up to disk and then we're just gonna spool them over onto tape.
Speaker:When they first started doing it, we all thought they were crazy
Speaker:'cause this was so expensive.
Speaker:This then became less expensive.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And And then what happened right around 1999, we started partying like it's 1999.
Speaker:Because someone invented what?
Speaker:Deduplicated
Speaker:Deed duplication.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And.
Speaker:This idea where we're going to find the duplicate blocks of data between
Speaker:different backup sets and we're gonna, we're just gonna put pointers.
Speaker:And the pointer thing doesn't really work on tape.
Speaker:I mean, it can technically work, but think about the idea of you having to
Speaker:load a hundred tapes to restore one file.
Speaker:And that's why DDU doesn't really work on tape.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Uh, we went from using disk staging and then we more and more
Speaker:people started using d, you know, deduplicated disk storage, right?
Speaker:Avamar was the first company I remember working with right
Speaker:originally called Undo with two O's.
Speaker:Really funny that a company that, that Ddu had two o's in their company name, I
Speaker:think they got too many, too many Razrs, and, and so they changed it to Avamar.
Speaker:but I think one of the keys, right, that DDU became so popular, like you had
Speaker:mentioned, it's the cost of disk, right?
Speaker:disk was
Speaker:Yeah, yeah,
Speaker:the difference between disk and tape was significant.
Speaker:That
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:were like, there's no way
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:backup purposes, I can spend millions of dollars on this.
Speaker:It, it was literally like two orders of magnitude cheaper.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And people were like, well, we'll, we'll just deal with it.
Speaker:And so what this did was it brought disk down.
Speaker:It's still nowhere near as cheap as tape, but it made it.
Speaker:Doable.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And, you know, Avamar was the first one I remember working with back in 1999.
Speaker:And then, um, uh, data Domain was another big one and they did really well.
Speaker:And I worked with a number of companies, uh, along the way that did either target
Speaker:site Dedupe the way data domain did, or source I ddu the way Avamar did.
Speaker:And, and, and it, it basically made disk feasible.
Speaker:It made it, it made it not be crazy expensive.
Speaker:There was another thing that happened, um, that another technological change
Speaker:that happened right around the same time.
Speaker:Do you remember what that might have been
Speaker:that helped make disk backup media more affordable?
Speaker:Oh, this is like the nearline disks.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So what, what do you mean.
Speaker:Oh, this is because previously enterprise disks were all fiber channel,
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And then they started looking at serial a TA disks.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:to lower the cost because these did not need all the performance
Speaker:of your fiber channel disk.
Speaker:This is just backup media.
Speaker:It's your secondary copy.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:You don't
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:on very expensive storage.
Speaker:Yeah, so when you coupled the fact that they were using Sada disks with, you know,
Speaker:less expensive sort of almost consumer grade disks with, um, deduplication,
Speaker:you put those two things together and backup disks suddenly became way
Speaker:more affordable than it used to be.
Speaker:And it came with some really great features.
Speaker:I'd say one of the best feature a co a couple of them.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, 'cause I, you know, I'm, I say good things before I say like how bad it was.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So one great thing is that it's super easy to do backup verification.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And, you know, and, and I remember when Veeam came out with, uh, their Sure.
Speaker:Backup, I think that's the name of it, their Sure backup feature
Speaker:where you could create a, a recovery group and you could, um.
Speaker:Um, you could automatically test your backups without
Speaker:actually having to do a restore.
Speaker:You, you could basically run your, you could run your VM
Speaker:from your backups, right?
Speaker:was an, and also they had the ability to do, to test your backups.
Speaker:I remember
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:feature where it was like, Hey, we will spin up everything in
Speaker:an isolated environment for
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:to bring it up, to test everything, to make sure your backups are actually,
Speaker:uh, restorable and good to go.
Speaker:And then we'll spin everything down and you can continue on your way.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And that is only possible with disk.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and then another thing that, that, that sort of came as a, and
Speaker:these are all things that modern day users, I think just sort of assume.
Speaker:That they're there, but they, they're new to those of us that have been
Speaker:around a few years, and that is the idea that I could replicate backups,
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:right?
Speaker:So we could have onsite backups and offsite backups without.
Speaker:Handing tapes to a man in a van.
Speaker:'cause that's the only way we got data off site.
Speaker:We made a bunch of tapes, we copied 'em to a bunch of other tapes,
Speaker:and then we put 'em in a box and we handed it to a man in a van.
Speaker:Now, because we've really reduced, not just the total storage that we need to
Speaker:store backups, but the daily amount, like it was less than like a half a
Speaker:percent of the size of the environment each day, then we could replicate
Speaker:those backups and so we could have an onsite backup and an offsite backup.
Speaker:A hundred percent automated.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Which you may recall in the, the episode that just aired, uh, today as we're
Speaker:recording this, uh, automation, right?
Speaker:You can have a hundred percent automated backup.
Speaker:So backups are so much more reliable than they were back in the day.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:Yeah, sure.
Speaker:Also, the notion of virtual synthetics.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Why don't you talk about what, what's a virtual synthetic?
Speaker:so like you had alluded to earlier, Curtis, right, with tape, you sort of
Speaker:had fulls and incrementals, and in order to restore your data, you had to always
Speaker:go back to the full and then replay all your incrementals till you got to
Speaker:the point that you needed to get to.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:with storage deduplication, you could actually create each
Speaker:copy being a virtual full copy
Speaker:right.
Speaker:your data, such that you only need to go to one copy in order to restore the data.
Speaker:You don't have to go do all the replaying.
Speaker:It significantly cuts down on your recovery.
Speaker:Yeah, agreed.
Speaker:Uh, and, and there, there were two ways to do that, right?
Speaker:You could do it through the software, the backup software, where you basically
Speaker:just sort of create a new full by.
Speaker:Copying, you've got all the stuff all in one place and you can just
Speaker:create a new fold by copying it.
Speaker:But then there were, there were products like data domain, um, that, uh, that they
Speaker:would just do it with pointers, right?
Speaker:And, uh, and so you don't, you could create a new fold that, that, that
Speaker:behaved like a full and look like a full to the backup software, but
Speaker:you didn't actually do any data movement and that's awesome, right?
Speaker:Um, now it will be.
Speaker:Just as I take a stab at this, it will be the most fragmented, full backup
Speaker:you've you've ever seen in your life.
Speaker:'cause the bits are all over the place, right?
Speaker:Uh, but it will behave like a full, and we don't, you know, again, backups are so
Speaker:much better than they were when, you know, back in the day because back in the day.
Speaker:The best I, the best design I had back before we went to disk was a
Speaker:monthly full, a weekly cumulative incremental or differential, depending
Speaker:on which product we're talking about.
Speaker:And then a daily incremental.
Speaker:So a typical restore you would restore the weekly full you would restore,
Speaker:I'm sorry, you would restore the monthly full, you'd restore the latest
Speaker:weekly differential, and then you'd restore six, um, incrementals, right?
Speaker:And.
Speaker:If any files changed multiple times, you were actually restoring
Speaker:the same data multiple times.
Speaker:Now we know exactly what the latest version is and we
Speaker:can just go straight to it.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So
Speaker:But it all sounds amazing.
Speaker:why are you, uh, knocking on disk then?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:RM minus R star, that's why
Speaker:DEL star, star.
Speaker:I I Is there, there, there's a, a recursive option to delete,
Speaker:isn't there slash r or something?
Speaker:Or is it back slash r?
Speaker:but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:okay, so I agree.
Speaker:There's no agreeing or disagreeing.
Speaker:It's a fact.
Speaker:me, let me, it
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:but are techniques with disk storage to help prevent
Speaker:Yes,
Speaker:of situations from happening,
Speaker:there are tech techniques.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Such as immutable storage or setting like object lock or whatever the
Speaker:mechanism is that the system supports
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:order to be able to prevent action
Speaker:there are many technologies that we have since invented in order to address,
Speaker:to solve the problem we created.
Speaker:Uh, I don't dunno if you've ever heard, uh, you know, NIT
Speaker:we never solve any problems.
Speaker:We just move them right?
Speaker:Um, we definitely created new problems, and the worst, I think the worst
Speaker:sufferers of this, and again, I, I don't want to pick on my friends at
Speaker:Veeam, okay, but Veeam customers and products like Veeam, it's not just Veeam,
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:basically the default setup, you put the backups in, like e slash backups,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:and then a a, a threat actor comes there and says.
Speaker:Look at that.
Speaker:E slash backups, R minus R, you know, well, I guess delete, delete
Speaker:startup star slash RI don't know.
Speaker:I should really look that up anyway.
Speaker:I know there's a recursive option, right?
Speaker:Or they, or if they have console access, they just right
Speaker:click on it, delete it, right.
Speaker:And then empty, empty, uh, recycle bin.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so that's the real prop.
Speaker:And, and.
Speaker:I remember, um, you know, I remember this, um, when I was at Veeam on many years ago.
Speaker:Um, you know, Veeam really acknowledged this, right?
Speaker:It, it was a difficult session, I think, for them to, to sort of tell people,
Speaker:Hey, this is a, this is a threat and we have this 'cause you remember,
Speaker:you remember the, what was the Veeam?
Speaker:The, no, what was the, no, no, no.
Speaker:What was the Veeam uh, motto?
Speaker:We make it easy.
Speaker:It just works.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:It just works.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so they were like, it just works.
Speaker:Having said that we need to, we need to do this thing.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And, and they've done a good job at responding to this threat.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:But, uh,
Speaker:It takes
Speaker:there, there was a, there was a time there where, you know,
Speaker:a lot of people were attacking.
Speaker:Windows based backups, the biggest of which, uh, is Veeam, I still think
Speaker:they're probably the biggest Windows backup software, uh, in terms of
Speaker:number of installations for sure.
Speaker:Um, and so we just need to acknowledge, I I, I, that's my goal of this episode
Speaker:is I need you to understand the risk that your backups are under, right?
Speaker:We talk about this in other episodes, that backups are the number one target.
Speaker:Your, uh, of your threat actor, if they get, uh, an initial access, the first
Speaker:thing they're gonna do is try to figure out what your backup software is, and
Speaker:they're gonna try to take it out, right?
Speaker:And you can, you can address this, but again, the first thing we
Speaker:have to admit that we're powerless over, you know, step one, right?
Speaker:Admit that we're powerless over threat actors, uh, and, you know, appeal to
Speaker:a higher power of, uh, immutability.
Speaker:Of calling it Veeam, call it like networker or Avamar
Speaker:or something like that,
Speaker:Oh, like re rename, renaming the folders.
Speaker:and your process names.
Speaker:Rename it like, definitely not backups.
Speaker:E like, don't look over here.
Speaker:Um, e slash um, pork recipes.
Speaker:Um, you know, this is what, what do we call, what do we call
Speaker:that, that, that there are people that do that kind of stuff.
Speaker:Well, I was gonna say security by obscurity, but you are, you are correct.
Speaker:Obfuscation is definitely the i, the, the formal term, and you should do that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:These are, this is on the list of things that you should do.
Speaker:One of them that you've heard me talk about is, uh, and we're gonna talk this
Speaker:more about this in other episodes, but.
Speaker:Is to get the backups out of user space.
Speaker:It should not be in eco and back slash backups or slash backups,
Speaker:whatever, whatever os you're running.
Speaker:Is the other thing, also, don't run your backup software as root.
Speaker:Well, but you kind of need to, right?
Speaker:It needs to be by the way, your, your Linux is showing your, your Unix.
Speaker:Uh.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:Like, you know, the fact that you're, well, we're both, we're both, you
Speaker:know, Lennox recovery, uh, recovering Lennox people, um, of course, but
Speaker:do, do you remember the world before?
Speaker:Lennox?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Lennox was the thing by the time you were okay.
Speaker:Because I remember the world before Lennox.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I remember the world before Windows too.
Speaker:I do too.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I remember like.
Speaker:all the fancy, nonstop kernel systems my dad used to work on.
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Your dad's old.
Speaker:Um, tell him I said hey.
Speaker:Anyway.
Speaker:Yeah, so there are, there are a number of things that we can do and we'll
Speaker:talk about them in other episodes, but just a, just a quick idea is one is
Speaker:to get the backups out of user space.
Speaker:So if you can see your backups as econ back slash backups, this is a problem
Speaker:Anyone
Speaker:the.
Speaker:see that too.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly right.
Speaker:Um, but if you're able to put it on, um, basically immutable, truly immutable
Speaker:storage, meaning again, the standard is if you can't delete the backups,
Speaker:then they can't delete the backups.
Speaker:If you could delete it, then maybe they can.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, but, um.
Speaker:You know, immutability, immutability, immutability.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You know, it keeps coming up in, you know, every episode, but
Speaker:it's like, if you don't have your backups on a truly immutable storage
Speaker:device, um, then this is a problem.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And you're just, uh, leaving the, it's sort of like, if we're being chased by
Speaker:a bear, I don't have to outrun the bear.
Speaker:You just have torun me.
Speaker:I just have to cover from you.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And, and what, what, what does that have to do with this?
Speaker:You don't necessarily have to beat every, you know, threat actor.
Speaker:You just have to be less, uh, appealing than the other person.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and um, so there, there are techniques that we cover.
Speaker:Uh, by the way, I haven't mentioned, uh, my upcoming book, uh, how to, um.
Speaker:that's.
Speaker:Oh, the, the one that, yeah, the one that's right there.
Speaker:Um, the, uh, learning ransomware responsive recovery that I wrote with
Speaker:Dr. Mike Sailor, who is a blue team expert, uh, fighting a good fight
Speaker:out there in the trenches every day.
Speaker:And, um, uh, coming to a shelf near you.
Speaker:Uh, you can read, you can, you can actually see the early version if you're
Speaker:a o' rally learning platform, uh, person.
Speaker:You can see that right now.
Speaker:Uh, and then the, the.
Speaker:Regular version will be coming out in March of 2026.
Speaker:So, all right, so that's the thing.
Speaker:disk is awesome, except when it's not.
Speaker:Um, just like tape is awesome, except when it's not.
Speaker:yeah, you need to understand the limitations of different technologies
Speaker:and use it in the appropriate way, and then make sure you're
Speaker:able to cover the weaknesses.
Speaker:Man, man's got to know his limitations.
Speaker:Oh, Curtis.
Speaker:Dirty Harry.
Speaker:Love that movie.
Speaker:Um, I can't remember if I shot five or six.
Speaker:Do you feel lucky?
Speaker:Anyway, sorry if, if you don't know what I'm talking about, that would be early.
Speaker:Clint Eastwood, dirty Harry, uh, set.
Speaker:Where?
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:All the dirty Harry movies are set.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:San Francisco, dude.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, what the 44 Magnum, this is the 44 Magnum most powerful handgun in the world.
Speaker:Blow your head clean off.
Speaker:So question you gotta ask yourself is, do I feel lucky?
Speaker:I actually re-watched that just not that long ago.
Speaker:what I was gonna say.
Speaker:You know those lines too well.
Speaker:Well, I wa, I mean, I watched that movie many times and that's one of the most
Speaker:quotable movie lines, you know, ever.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:is amazing that you have not seen
Speaker:what
Speaker:Kung Fu Panta,
Speaker:I have seen Kung fu Panta.
Speaker:but not enough.
Speaker:You can't
Speaker:Not enough.
Speaker:Not as many as you, how many times have you think you've seen Kung fu Panda?
Speaker:The 200 something.
Speaker:I, I don't, I don't.
Speaker:I don't get it anyway.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:People, disk based backups are great, but, uh, they do have one
Speaker:major limitation and we made things better, but then we made things worse.
Speaker:And the, the threat actors are coming for you, backups.
Speaker:You've got to make sure that they can't get to them.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Uh, thanks persona for the chat.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Then make sure you pick up Curtis's latest book.
Speaker:Persona's name's in it.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:that is a wrap.
Speaker:The backup wrap up is written, recorded and produced by me w Curtis Preston.
Speaker:If you need backup or Dr. Consulting content generation or expert witness
Speaker:work, check out backup central.com.
Speaker:You can also find links from my O'Reilly Books on the same website.
Speaker:Remember, this is an independent podcast and any opinions that you
Speaker:hear are those of the speaker.
Speaker:And not necessarily an employer.
Speaker:Thanks for listening.
Speaker:I.