If you’re a G Suite administrator who’s tested your organization’s ability to recover from data loss within the past year, you’re a rare leader. Recent surveys for World Backup Day by a number of different organizations show less than half of respondents consistently test their ability to restore. Without testing restores, your G Suite domains aren’t proven protected, and your organization may be at risk…and if you’ve adopted G Suite Team Drives, the risk can be amplified.
What makes Team Drives different for backup and restore best practices?
By ensuring that an organization, not an individual, “owns” the data in a collaboration Drive, Team Drives reduces the risk that data is unavailable when the creator of a folder or file leaves an organization. Even the best teams, however, may suffer from one of their own being negligent or going rogue. With Team Drives, a user with Full Access — aka Team Drives owner — may accidentally or intentionally delete a folder and all its contents, or a whole Team Drive, and put the entire organization at risk.
What’s not different — and what you also need to protect against — is that Team Drives users can edit files, and users can edit in error. It could be days or weeks before someone realizes that the data is not correct.
What G Suite pros say about Spanning’s Team Drives data protection
If you’re ready to reduce the risk of data loss in Team Drives, recent reviews of Spanning on the G Suite Marketplace should help your evaluation process. Test Spanning to protect your Team Drives, and join these leaders today. For more reviews, visit the G Suite Marketplace.
Video: G Suite Team Drives Backup
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Spanning authored by Lori Witzel. Read the original post at: https://spanning.com/blog/protecting-g-suite-team-drives-data-are-you-leading-or-failing/
Digital+ Partners Leads Continuation Funding Round in Growing Automated Threat Analysis & Detection Provider, Closing its Series B Round at…
For three years OpenWRT had a severe validation problem with its download package manager, until a fuzz tester found and…
It’s time to say a final “Goodbye” to Flash. (Or should that be “Good riddance”?) With earlier this week seeing…
This is the second in a series of blog posts that discuss how smart DNS resolvers can enhance ongoing network…
Security researchers detected a new spear-phishing attack that’s using an exact domain spoofing tactic in order to impersonate Microsoft. On…
Welcome back to the last part of our three-part blog series on how to leverage analytics to deliver an exceptional…