Submitted via IRC for SoyCow5743
Google will automatically [begin a delayed - Ed] delete all of a user's Android backup files — stored in his Google Drive account — if the user does not use his phone for two weeks. After Google detects this period of inactivity, it will start a 60-day counter for old Android backup files. After that counter reaches zero, Google will delete the backup files from the user's Drive account.
The auto-delete function was discovered this week by a Reddit user who used it to create backups for a defective Nexus 6P. The user sent back the phone, and while he waited for a replacement, he saw that his Nexus 6P backup files stored were marked for deletion.
[...] People who rely on Android's built-in Drive-based backup system should keep an eye out on the Backups folder. Storing backups offline or using specialized backup & restore Android apps is an alternative.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by NotSanguine on Monday September 18 2017, @12:06AM (1 child)
Two Words: Very long passphrases [aescrypt.com].
After two whole weeks, no one will remember such things. ;)
Strong encryption and plausible deniability are a powerful combination.
Besides, using some automated spying tool from Google to back up your unencrypted data, rather than strongly encrypting the data yourself and (only if necessary) uploading to Someone Else's ServersTM is rather dumb, don't you think?
No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
(Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 18 2017, @12:58PM
Hmmm … seems one of us has troubles counting. ;-)