this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
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Hi all,

As self-hosting is not just "home-hosting" I guess this post should also be on-topic here.

Beginning of the year, bleeping-computers published an interesting post on the biggest cybersecurity stories of 2023.

Item 13 is an interesing one. (see URL of this post). Summary in short A Danish cloud-provider gets hit by a ransomware attack, encrypting not only the clients data, but also the backups.

For a user, this means that a senario where, not only your VM becomes unusable (virtual disk-storage is encrypted), but also the daily backups you made to the cloud-provider S3-storage is useless, might be not as far-fetches then what your think.

So .. conclussion ??? If you have VMs at a cloud-provider and do daily backups, it might be usefull to actually get your storage for these backups from a different provider then the one where your house your VMs.

Anybody any ideas or remarks on this?

(*) https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/the-biggest-cybersecurity-and-cyberattack-stories-of-2023/

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[–] SteefLem@lemmy.world 13 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Its just some elses computer. Said this since the beginning

[–] kristoff@infosec.pub 4 points 10 months ago (1 children)

The issue is not cloud vs self-hosted. The question is "who has technical control over all the servers involved". If you would home-host a server and have a backup of that a network of your friend, if your username / password pops up on a infostealer-website, you will be equaly in problem!

[–] seang96@spgrn.com 2 points 10 months ago

If you follow the 3-2-1 backup policyand unless it's the end of the world you should be fine.

3 backups 2 different media types 1 off-site

If your worried about a cloud provider getting attacked then have 2 off-site.