Western Digital gets sued for sneaking SMR disks into its NAS channel
All three of the surviving conventional hard drive vendors—Toshiba, Western Digital, and Seagate—have gotten caught sneaking disks featuring Shingled Magnetic Recording technology into unexpected places recently. But Western Digital has been the most brazen of the three, and it's been singled out for a class action lawsuit in response.
Although all three major manufacturers quietly added SMR disks to their desktop hard drive line-up, Western Digital is the only one so far to slip them into its NAS (Network Attached Storage) stack. NAS drives are expected to perform well in RAID and other multiple disk arrays, whether ZFS pools or consumer devices like Synology or Netgear NAS appliances.
In sharp contrast to Western Digital's position on SMR disks as NAS, Seagate executive Greg Belloni told us that there weren't any SMR disks in the Ironwolf (competitor to Western Digital Red) line-up now and that the technology is not appropriate for that purpose.
[...] Hattis Law has initiated a class action lawsuit against Western Digital, accordingly. The lawsuit alleges both that the SMR technology in the newer Western Digital Red drives is inappropriate for the marketed purpose of the drives and that Western Digital deliberately "deceived and harm[ed] consumers" in the course of doing so.
Previously: AnandTech Interview With Seagate's CTO: New HDD Technologies Coming
Western Digital: Over Half of Data Center HDDs Will Use SMR by 2023
Seagate Caught Using SMR in Barracuda Compute and Desktop Drives
(Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Saturday May 30 2020, @07:02PM (1 child)
Any more, I don't feel too trusting of spinning rust or the remaining manufacturers. In recent years. have had hard drives fail on me far more often than they ever did in the past. Yay, they can hold 2T. Buy at least 2, preferably 3, and RAID them, in hopes that will be enough to prevent data loss.
I figure that the reduced competition has the remaining manufacturers racing to the bottom, cheapening hard drives every way they can.
I don't know how reliable SSD is, but so far, they seem excellent.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday May 30 2020, @08:28PM
Yeah, I think I'm switching to SSDs for bulk. I might get a 2 TB if it drops to $100.
Ultimately, we need a better replacement for bulk. Something like this [wikipedia.org], but ideally it should be rewritable.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]