Re: Long running backups - OK?

From: Tim Gorman <tim.evdbt_at_gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 27 Jan 2018 11:11:05 -0700
Message-ID: <89e362c9-71a9-0766-91f2-05e1e37ca26d_at_gmail.com>


Sorry, but calling BS on that nonsense, simply untrue and utterly ridiculous no matter how you view it.

Legislation and regulations call for retention of information for review during an audit, not "data backups".  The laws cite neither backup nor recovery, just records and documents.  Auditors are not interested in zeros and ones.

Take for example:  https://www.sec.gov/rules/final/33-8180.htm

On 1/27/18 10:50, Mladen Gogala wrote:
> That is not entirely true. Some laws (SOX, HIPPA, PCI, Murphy) mandate
> 7 years of data backups. They do not mandate the ability to restore.
> Theoretically, you can have a 7 years old 9i rman backup of your
> database at the time and that is fine. Nobody mandates that you need
> to have a 9i instance to restore it to. So, if the regulators, and
> that's where the Murphy's law comes into play, do an inspection of
> your IT, you need to show them 7 years of backups.  Nobody will ask
> you if you can actually restore those backups. That is how backups can
> be important.
>
>
> On 01/26/2018 02:00 PM, Glenn Travis wrote:
>> Any question about backups should really be converted into a question
>> on restore and recovery, because backups don't matter,
>> restore/recovery from those backups matters.
>

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Received on Sat Jan 27 2018 - 19:11:05 CET

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