@litchralee
Thank you!
i didn’t expect serious answers here, but this was a nice read,
so the various jobs around computers were kind of obsoleted, but the job description just shifted and the title remained valid most of the times,
now i’m interested to see what we’ll do 20 years from now rather than just being annoyed by the “don’t learn ${X}, it’s outdated” guys
@christophski
i prefer not to recommend specific storage providers, as i can’t ensure they’ll keep being good in the future and won’t suddenly fail taking all data with them.
Still, like other data hoarders probably already told you, ensure that a single provider doesn’t hold the only copy of your data and that the files you put on them are encrypted, so that weirdos don’t go snooping in your privates.
I’d also advise choosing providers that support standard protocols like s3, sftp, webdav or similar, so that you can use an external tool to manage your data and migrate more easily in case you need to switch.
now, it always depends exactly what you need it for, i was talking about keeping personal files i care about in the cloud, you could need something different for another purpose, but it would get too long for a comment on lemmy