Service
Server backup
We make copies that can genuinely be restored, and we check that regularly. The 3-2-1 model, ransomware protection and clear RTO and RPO targets, not an assumption that a backup is somewhere.
- ISO/IEC 27001
- 3000+ workstations
- Since 2017
Most companies have a backup. Fewer companies know whether data can be restored from it. We build backups so they survive a failure, a mistake and a ransomware attack, and we test recovery before it is needed for real.
What the backup service covers
Copies designed for recovery, not for a report that the backup ran.
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Copies in the 3-2-1 model
Three copies, two media, one off site. A standard that genuinely protects against data loss.
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Ransomware resilience
Immutable and separated copies that an attack will not encrypt along with production data.
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Recovery tests
We restore data on a trial basis regularly. A backup without a test is only an assumption, not a guarantee.
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Backup monitoring
We watch whether the backup ran and whether it is complete. A failed copy is an alert, not silence.
What is server backup?
Server backup is the regular creation of copies of data and systems that can be restored after hardware failure, a user mistake or a ransomware attack. Simply running a copy is not enough, because the value of a backup lies in the ability to restore the data, confirmed by a test.
The server backup service for business builds copies in the 3-2-1 model, that is three copies on two media with one off site, keeps them immutable and separated from production, and tests recovery regularly. We agree RTO and RPO targets, monitor that copies succeed and support companies in Warsaw and remotely.
Ransomware goes for your copies first
A modern ransomware attack does not encrypt data straight away. First it looks around the network and targets the backups, because they decide whether the company pays the ransom. A backup permanently connected to the same network and the same credentials gets encrypted along with production. Then all that is left is negotiating with a criminal.
That is why we build separated and immutable copies that an attack cannot delete or overwrite. Combined with the 3-2-1 model and recovery tests, this gives real resilience: even after a successful attack you have something to come back from, without paying the ransom.
How we design backup
Scope, frequency and parameters matched to the importance of the data.
- 3-2-1backup model
- immutableransomware resistant copies
- RTO and RPOdefined and agreed
- testsregular recovery drills
- We agree what and how often. We match the copy scope and frequency to the importance of the data. Not everything needs the same regime.
- RTO and RPO in writing. We agree how quickly you need to be back at work and how much data can be lost. That defines the backup design.
- Verification, not faith. We test recovery to plan. We want to know the copy works before a failure happens.
Model rozliczeń
We bill the backup as a fee depending on the number of servers and the data volume. The cost is fixed and predictable, with no surprises during recovery.
Included
- Configuration and maintenance of copies
- Monitoring of backup completion
- Regular recovery tests
- Report and recommendations
Beyond the plan
- Expansion into disaster recovery
- Off site storage of large volumes
- Restores in special scenarios
Backup is the foundation. Full continuity is provided by disaster recovery, which we can add.
Frequently asked questions
What is the 3-2-1 model?
It is a rule: three copies of data, on two different media, one of them off the main site. It protects against hardware failure, mistakes and attacks, because losing one copy does not mean losing the data.
Does backup protect against ransomware?
Only when the copies are separated and immutable. We build backups so an attack cannot encrypt the copies along with production data, which is a common mistake in simple solutions.
How do you know the backup really works?
From recovery tests. We restore data on a trial basis regularly and check completeness. Only a successful restore confirms the copy does its job.
How does backup differ from disaster recovery?
Backup is copies of data you can recover from. Disaster recovery is the ability to quickly restore the whole environment after a failure, with a defined time to return to work. Backup is the foundation of DR.
See what peace of mind with IT costs
Answer 2 questions about your company. You will see a simple estimate right away, and we will prepare a full proposal within 24 business hours.
- 2 minutes, no commitment
- You talk to an engineer, not a salesperson
- No spam, one contact about your quote