W3 Discussion Comments

D1 and D2:

Testing the plan: Many of you were surprised that companies were not better prepared for disasters. The preparation can be very costly. Also, as you mentioned, the preparation can be next to useless if recovery procedures are not tested periodically. This testing can also be expensive. Sometimes business look at this expense and make a bad calculation on risk vs. reward.

In the future, you may be involved in making decisions about how much to invest in Disaster Recovery Plans and Drills vs. projects that could increase sales and profits. How much risk will you be willing to take?  Will you be able to sell your point of view to the person that makes the decision?

Many of you mentioned file backups in this discussion. Another key aspect of disaster recovery is having a way to get in contact with the people in the company who will be involved in the recovery. In a major disaster, how can you find out which employees are still alive and uninjured? Not being able to find people who know passwords or know where recovery passwords are stored can delay recovery even if backup files are available. What procedures and lists would you setup in advance? Remember that the normal phone systems may not be working.

War Story: Never assume that automatic backups are automatic. In Tech Republic, there was an article where a consultant discovered that backups at his client had not taken place for two weeks because someone unplugged the external hard drive being used for backups in order to charge his cell phone.

Trade-offs: Estimating the time to recovery helps management understand the trade-off between cost and recovery time. Having servers off-site ready to go allows for a quicker recovery. This is expensive in terms of initial investment and requires that data and programs be frequently replicated to the "hot backup" site. It is a business decision to determine how to balance costs vs. the business needed for a quick recovery. For example, could Dominican survive a one-week outage? (I would say yes). Could the Chicago Mercantile Exchange survive a one-week outage? (I would say they would never recover their reputation and lost business).

Chicago is not immune to disasters: Chicago has tornados and winds especially along the I-55 corridor.  Dominican has a multiple week power outage five summers ago and made extensive use of all the backup generators.

What if you are not in the IT Department? Even if you run a department other than IT, you should determine how your department will operate under various disaster scenarios (no power for 2 days, fire in your department, flood keeps 75% of your workers from reaching the office etc.).

Reference Sources: Several of you considered who was behind the disaster recovery articles that you used in the second Discussion. This is important. Articles by a government agency are generally unbiased and cover major points but many time lack details. Articles by vendors may have more details but are written to emphasize what that vendor does well. You would not expect an article written by Google to recommend the use of One Drive or Microsoft Azure for disaster recovery.

If you hire an outside Consultant you should use him/her as a Consultant - not as the person to be making the management decisions that you should be making. You need the mind-set that you are responsible and you are in charge and that the Consultant is there to provide technical assistance and advice.

Personal Disaster Recovery (D3):

Personal disaster recovery planning also involves more than cell phone and hard drive backup. Depending in your situation, health insurance, disability income insurance, life insurance and home/renters insurance could also be very important.

Many of you mentioned using the Cloud for backup. Systems like Carbonite allow you to specify what files on your personal hard drive should be automatically copied to an off-site server. Other types of cloud personal backup include copying documents and files to Drop Box, Evernote, Google Drive,or Windows OneDrive.

Although this is not a course in computer security, you need to consider the security of backup copies of your personal and company files. Corporate Backups should be encrypted so if someone finds your backup files, they cannot easily extract information from them. Backups should have the same level of security as the original data.

What would you do if you lost access to one of your cloud accounts? For example, what if someone got your Google id and password and used it to send spam or commit fraud. Google could then suspend access to your account and you would not have access to your documents and e-mail.

Cloud storage is not perfect: Just last year, the cloud provider Microsoft deleted a number of customer databases due to a technical problem. Microsoft recovered most of them completely but some customers lost a five minute window of transactions.

It's about more than theft: Many of you had good plans to recover from a stolen device. Could you recover from accidental deletion of critical folders considering that you cloud copy could be automatically updated to reflect your accidental deletion?

What about software? You should probably keep a record of licenses and software keys incase you have to reinstall software on a new computer.

Personal DR: My disaster recovery requirements are unique. I spend three months of the year over 2,000 miles from Dominican and therefore cannot rely on Dominican hardware or personnel to help me recover. I also want to be able to duplicate student issues that arise either on a Windows machine or a MAC. Finally, I cannot afford a week to recover from a disaster because my students and my consulting clients expect a better service level than that. The time-to-recover requirement is why I have more than one computer with me wherever I am working.

My primary computer is a Windows 10 machine backed up on external hard drives and in the cloud by the backup software Acronis True Image 2020. My backup computer is a MAC that is backed up by time machine. I have all of my documents stored in Google Drive, Dropbox, Evernote, One Drive Personal, and One Drive Business. This keeps files synced between the Windows machine and the MAC and my Windows 10 Desktop at Dominican. The MAC also has the Parallels software installed which allows me to run a full version of the Windows 10 Operating System on the MAC.