I understand you, but that argument is actually false.
Most people buy such nas just because they do not want to put on a publicly cloud their data, why they buy their own cloud device.
How the want, we live in a modern world where we always need access to our files, because not to do it makes you much less flexible as business and thereby lose competitivteit front of your competitors who quickly able to handle exist oaths (sharing, collaboration, virtual machines, etc ..)
I must also disagree argue that cloud is the future, you just look at what the main business is booming on the Internet (yes – & gt; whatever cloud is )
So it comes down to the fact that you do, sooner or later something will have to share, but make sure you have security on multiple levels.
Many people think that a raid a backup is because if one drive fails then another take – & gt; fault backup your data completely somewhere else surcharges (best on another site and with a history)
Similar to the previous sentence too many people think of a username and password makes everything safe – & gt; error – & gt; hackers will look for weaknesses so that you do not even know username and password need or they will bruteforcen until they get in anyway.
Many people do not even know their nas on the internet staat..hoe is that?
Simple – & gt; If UPnP is enabled by default on your router and NAS, the NAS itself will open the appropriate ports on the internet … comfortably but very dangerous …
So I do not think you should be afraid to put your data online, but contact with security companies like mine, which can screen your entire security infrastructure (firewalls, antivirussesn, nas’es, backups, web sites, etc …) it is all very complex , release certainly counseling or help with that task.
[comment edited by sebastienbo on September 9 2015 16:23]
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