![]() You need to partner with a reseller to get it though, perfect for small offices (IMHO).ĪNY solution that works without using mapped network drives works against these ransom wares NOW. ![]() Sure, it's not free and you pay every month, but it has restore to dif hardware, p2v restores, restore as shares, has great notifications, etc. The cheapest ones are less than a PC and ~$100 a month. Get a Datto Alto device to backup his whole server(s). (Disclaimer, i resell datto to customers) This is your business, PROFESSIONAL crazy capable backups can cost less than your home cable bill, but a lot of people won't invest in them. It's just hard to get some people to put the money in. Backup is a few weeks old, it's encrypted since it was connected to the machine, no one was rotating. Just got a call from a customer today who got hit, and never puts any $$$ into their IT (small auto maint shop.) They backup to flash drives, rotate themselves, no notifications. If you just want local, backup with like r-image to a NAS (NO MAPPED LETTER! DIRECT TO IP ADDRESS SO THE RANSOMWARE DOESN"T SEE IT) I probably got myself in over my head here, but it's good learning, the way I see it.ĪSPC, if i recall, that terrible windows 3.1 looking billing software? Have a customer that uses it! Chiropractor too. And also, Dropbox is out of the question. What are some HIPAA compliant backup solutions available to me? Free is best, and encryption is a must. Their clonezilla image refuses to cooperate and their live disc of Genie Disaster Recovery keeps eating the backups recovery with memory read errors. The infection also managed to foobar a couple backup files of the database. for whatever reason, the most recent backup I see is from June of 2014. Just doing it out of the goodness of my heart.įor whatever reason, their "IT Guy" decided to back that database up to the free personal Dropbox and a couple other hard disks. I'm not an employee of his, for the record. ![]() Through sheer ignorance, and an IT guy (not on the payroll)that cut corners, their ASPC server -the one that has the database of patient billing info, Social Security #'s, and Insurance Policy info - gets encrypted. My doctor's (Chiropractor) office got hit by the lovely ransomware that's going around. So, if you've read my last thread, you know what's going on.
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