Hi everyone,

As always, every time I look at the AWS Glacier egress fee calculator I get fairly irked at how much they charge. Was wondering if anyone knew of any alternatives for cold storage in the cloud without such egregious charges. I will likely not access it ever because I have another offset backup, but just in case I do, I wouldn’t want to fork over thousands, really.

I don’t know how reliable Scaleway’s service is, and Cloudflare’s R2 doesn’t have a Archive offering. I would be interested in the Azure if anyone can convince me that I won’t go bankrupt trying to retrieve my data from them. I don’t want to go with Google with the recent stuff they have been doing with data on their servers.

Thanks!

  • solrize@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m pretty happy with Hetzner Storage Box at around 2 euro/month/TB with no bandwidth fees.

  • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    Fwiw, AWS offers a one-time egress without charge in response to the EU order to allow people to switch cloud providers.

    Once approved, we will provide credits for the data being migrated. We don’t require you to close your account or change your relationship with AWS in any way. You’re welcome to come back at any time. We will, of course, apply additional scrutiny if the same AWS account applies multiple times for free DTO.

    So if you’re going to do this for that one time you have to, probably not a big deal.

    But if I were you, I’d be prepared to egress, kill the account, and then create a new account.

    • rentar42@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      First: love that that’s a thing, but I find the blog post hilarious:

      We believe this choice must include the one to migrate your data to another cloud provider or on-premises. That’s why, starting today, we’re waiving data transfer out to the internet (DTO) charges when you want to move outside of AWS.

      and later

      We believe in customer choice, including the choice to move your data out of AWS. The waiver on data transfer out to the internet charges also follows the direction set by the European Data Act and is available to all AWS customers around the world and from any AWS Region.

      But sure: it’s out of their love for customer choice that they offer this now. The fact that it also fulfills the requirements by the EDA is purely coincidental, they would have done it for sure.

      Remember folks: regulation works. Sometimes corporations need the state(s) to force their hand to do the right thing.

      • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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        7 months ago

        TBF it’s nice that they allowed it for everybody. Usually when a company is forced to do something in the EU they only do it in the EU.

    • capital@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Transfer charges are not restore charges - which are required when bringing files out of glacier.

      Something to keep in mind.

  • meteokr@community.adiquaints.moe
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    7 months ago

    Does Backblaze work for what you are doing? It been a bit since I’ve price compared them, but I think it was something around 5$ a month per TB?

  • SteadyGoLucky@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    I would recommend to avoid Scaleway. They simply lost part of my files in the first week. Were very unresponsive and in the end could not recover. Pretty much everything you are hoping to never encounter with a storage provider.

    • kevincox@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      I also had a bad experience where I had a test website under a megabyte in a storage bucket. It was under the free tier and sat there for a few years. Then one month they sent me a bill (it was small, a handful of cents). Contact support saying that this use is under the free tier. They said that data was added then removed from the bucket. I hadn’t logged into the account, no living API keys. They wouldn’t forgive the charge.

      Luckily my credit card had expired so they just locked my account.

      • qaz@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Stork seems like a great choice considering the fact that it’s replicated over several regions by default. I might start using it myself.

    • bier@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 months ago

      They also have egress fees and I find the pricing very intransperent also you cannot delete your account without customer support and the delete function for files dose not work reliable

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      5 TB for $150 seems awfully high (didn’t click the link). I’m on my first year (and did it before they doubled their first year prices) and I got 50 TB for $500.

      1 TB is $15 for the first year.

  • zorflieg@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I use idrive e2. When I did the math it’s yearly up front cost works out what deep archive is without an egress fee and it’s quicker. In the fine print there is a fair use policy on downloads but I think it’s 5x the storage amount.

    Deep archive storage alone without puts is $24 TB year. idrive is $15 first year $30 subsequent. But it behaves more like s3 standard instant retrieval which is much more expensive.

    Small company but have been around a long time now.

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Yep, iDrive is the way to go, before they raised their prices I got 50 TB for a year for $500. I moved everything back locally, now I’m just going to use them for off-site backups. You can’t beat $15 for 1 TB for a year.

  • chiisana@lemmy.chiisana.net
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    7 months ago

    BuyVM has $24s/yr KVM server that you can attach storage at $5/TB/mn. So 5TB should set you back $325/yr all in. They’ve been around for quite some time — I’ve been client since 2011 — so they’re not likely to disappear anytime soon.

    • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Do they offer multi-region replication of storage? This stuff is fairly important to me and I’ve not exactly heard of BuyVM in the same league for Cloud storage providers like AWS, BackBlaze and Cloudflare

      • chiisana@lemmy.chiisana.net
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        7 months ago

        No multi-region unless you roll it yourself. Their offerings are primarily web hosting centric, so you’d need to do the heavy lifting yourself if you want more infra. Also worth noting that they’re definitely not in the same league as the big players, they’re just an old vendor that isn’t likely to disappear on you.