Recovering synced data
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caseyschroen last edited by
I also deleted the data sync. After that, I thought it would be a great idea to clear the memory because it was too clogged.
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caseyschroen last edited by leocg
I also deleted the data sync. After that, I thought it would be a great idea to clear the memory because it was too clogged. Out of habit, I cleaned up the data and realized that I had not made a single backup to the cloud storage. Of course, I felt like an idiot in this situation. I realized that I urgently needed to find data recovery specialists. My friend sent me a link to a website that offers such services. I hope that they'll enable synchronization for me after restoring the necessary data and help me restore the versions of the files that I deleted last week. What do you think about using cloud storage? How reliable is it to upload personal files there?
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blackbird71 last edited by
@caseyschroen said in Recovering synced data:
... What do you think about using cloud storage? How reliable is it to upload personal files there?
A lot of people use (or even rely on) cloud storage for backups; others prefer their own physical backup media. Much depends on the nature of your data, your technical proficiency, and your levels of trust.
It must be understood that the "cloud" is actually a storage drive in a physical server-computer owned by someone somewhere and accessed over the Internet. Backing up to the cloud always involves trusting a 3rd party with your data - either a backup service, a cloud-space provider, or the middlemen involved in the forwarding chain of moving the data into the cloud and recovering it back again. The trust you must extend depends greatly on the nature of your data: is it extremely sensitive (at a personal, commercial, or national level) and how vital to you is it - really?
For many ordinary users, a reputable cloud backup provider is an acceptable backup alternative, provided that the user has reasonably stable Internet access available all the time. Depending on the nature of the data, file encryption/decryption may need to be employed to better protect privacy while moving data to/from or while stored in the cloud.
For users who simply want to keep control of their data or whose data is very sensitive or mission-critical, data files should be backed up physically on a local basis, verified, and media kept safely stored - preferably with a copy in an off-site location (in case of fire/storm damage or theft). Physical storage can range from a USB thumb-drive to a full external hard-drive, depending on the amount of data being backed up.
In the case of browser data like in Opera, there is another possibility for ordinary users. Normally, important browser data consists of customized settings, history, tabs, passwords, sessions, etc. One can simply back up just the browser's user data folders to a separate location on the local drive or an external thumb drive. That provides the ability to easily restore that data should the browser or its regular data folders get hopelessly messed up.
Regardless, a key observation is that backups should be re-made as often as required to keep the backed data from becoming too stale or out-of-date. This is where many users fail... eg, they need data from within the past week, but their most recent backup data is 3 months old.
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Ebzy95 last edited by
I just accidentally deleted by sync data too and I've lost so much data
Is there any way to contact Opera and get this back??
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MasterTiger3 last edited by
I didn't delete my data I enabled sync on my new computer and then I did it on my old one and it erased my old data and I have no idea what to do.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@avij12 To reset your passphrase, you need to go to sync.opera.com and click on Reset Passphrase link.
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Ishnlv last edited by
If you made a backup of your synced data before it got deleted, you can bring it back from there. Just find your backup files and use them to get back the stuff you lost. This worked for me when I had a similar problem.