Disaster recovery planning is vital for smaller businesses. The rise of cyber attacks, especially ransomware, has increased the risk of disruption and data loss to smaller firms. SMEs are also ...
The sad truth is, system crashes happen. Worse, many users neglect the important task of making backup copies of their vital programs and data. So when those inevitable crashes do occur, users are ...
Forty-three percent of businesses never reopen after a disaster and another 29% fail within two years. Let that sink in. Disasters are unpredictable, but their consequences don’t have to be. Whether ...
The key reason: most enterprises rely on pretty much the same disaster recovery plan they’ve used for years — even though their environment has changed dramatically, thanks to SaaS, cloud, and AI. One ...
AI-powered continuous testing and simulation is transforming disaster recovery into a proactive, self-updating system that ...
Research by Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG) suggests more than half of firms now use DRaaS. That’s because DRaaS allows customers to recover quickly from a disaster or other outage, but without the ...
A key distinction in the realm of disaster recovery is the one between failover and failback. Both terms describe two sides of the same coin, complementary processes that are often brought together.
According to Rubrik's recent cybersecurity report, The State of Data Security in 2025: A Distributed Crisis, 90% of IT and security leaders reported experiencing cyberattacks over the past year.
In the aftermath of every major disaster, Americans watch a familiar scene unfold, where communities are devastated, families displaced and survivors struggle to navigate a system that often feels ...
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