Data Backups and Recovery
How to Protect Your Files from Accidents, Attacks, and Bad Luck
Why Backups Matter So Much
Data loss doesn’t just happen because of hackers.
Files are lost due to:
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Accidental deletion
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Device failure
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Theft or loss
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Ransomware
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Natural disasters
Backups turn disasters into inconveniences.
What a Backup Really Is
A backup is:
A copy of your data stored somewhere else.
If your original data is lost or damaged, you restore it from the backup.
No backup means no second chance.
The 3–2–1 Backup Rule (Made Simple)
A good backup strategy follows this rule:
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3 copies of your data
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2 different types of storage
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1 copy off-site
You don’t have to be perfect — just better than zero.
Types of Backups
Local Backups
Examples:
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External hard drives
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USB drives
Pros:
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Fast
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Under your control
Cons:
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Can be lost or damaged
Cloud Backups
Examples:
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Cloud storage services
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Automatic syncing
Pros:
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Off-site
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Accessible anywhere
Cons:
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Requires internet
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Depends on account security
Using both is ideal.
Automatic vs Manual Backups
Automatic backups:
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Run in the background
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Are reliable
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Don’t rely on memory
Manual backups:
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Easy to forget
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Useful for one-time copies
Automation is your friend.
Backups and Ransomware
Ransomware encrypts your files and demands payment.
Backups protect you by:
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Allowing you to restore files
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Removing pressure to pay
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Limiting damage
Without backups, options are limited.
What Should You Back Up?
Prioritize:
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Photos and videos
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Documents
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Work files
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Important records
You don’t need to back up:
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Operating system files
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Installed programs (usually)
Focus on what you can’t replace.
Backup Frequency (How Often?)
It depends on how often your data changes:
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Daily: work files, photos
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Weekly: personal documents
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Monthly: archives
Consistency matters more than perfection.
Test Your Backups
A backup that can’t be restored isn’t a backup.
Occasionally:
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Restore a file
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Check access
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Verify integrity
This builds confidence before an emergency.
Protecting Your Backups
Backups should also be secure:
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Encrypt external drives
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Protect cloud accounts with strong passwords and MFA
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Keep backup devices unplugged when not in use
Attackers target backups too.
What to Do After Data Loss
If data is lost:
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Stop using the device
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Identify the cause
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Restore from backup
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Secure the system before continuing
Don’t rush — mistakes can make recovery harder.
Key Takeaways
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Data loss is common
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Backups provide peace of mind
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Automation prevents forgetfulness
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Off-site copies matter
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Test backups occasionally
Quick Exercise
Ask yourself:
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What data would upset me most to lose?
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Do I have at least one backup of it?
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Is that backup accessible today?
If not, that’s your starting point.
Up Next
Next, we’ll look at privacy basics — how your data is collected, tracked, and shared online, and what you can do about it.