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Google Data Storage Hardware

Lightning Wipes Storage Disks At Google Data Center 141

An anonymous reader writes: Lightning struck a Google data center in Belgium four times in rapid succession last week, permanently erasing a small amount of users' data from the cloud. The affected disks were part of Google Computer Engine (GCE), a utility that lets people run virtual computers in the cloud on Google's servers. Despite the uncontrollable nature of the incident, Google has accepted full responsibility for the blackout and promises to upgrade its data center storage hardware, increasing its resilience against power outages.
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Lightning Wipes Storage Disks At Google Data Center

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  • Whaaa? (Score:5, Funny)

    by SpankiMonki ( 3493987 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:08AM (#50352115)
    Permanently erased? How can this be? Doesn't Google keep an off-site backup of my pr0n on tape or DVDs or sumpthin? So much for best practices, I guess.
    • Re:Whaaa? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by GigaplexNZ ( 1233886 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:21AM (#50352165)
      The affected service was Google Computer Engine, meaning that data may be changing. Replication isn't instantaneous, so I'd imagine the lost data was pending modifications.
      • and all data flushed to disk, and resources examined, before they opened for input again.

    • come ON, google eyes... slack-writing disks is always a danger. you don't have generator backup for the battery backup, and you're slopping data all over the floor as a result?

      losers.

    • But but ... it's the cloud. Why would you need a backup in the cloud?

      You mean we've been lied to?

    • It's a good thing that users routinely make local backups before uploading to the cloud.

    • its my understanding that google backs up their backups. queue backup song
  • Oh realy? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:20AM (#50352157)

    Lightning struck the same place not twice, but four times?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:28AM (#50352187)

      Cloud to Cloud lightning is about 3 times more common than cloud to ground, so its not that crazy.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 20, 2015 @04:02AM (#50352465)

        Another reason not to store your important data in the cloud.

        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          Another reason not to store your important data in the cloud.

          Arrrgh, somebody please mod this up!!! You made me snort my coffee.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I hate it when I miss an obvious pun. I shall now steal this for every argument against cloud computing, along with all the serious ones.

    • Re:Oh realy? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:31AM (#50352193)

      Contrary to popular belief, it's common that ligthning strikes several times at the same place. Something that was attracting lightning, if not destructed by the first strike, will still be a major target standing for the next ones.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Agreed ... I have a tree that my city wont let me cut down because it is an old growth tree and it has been hit 3x and every time it happens the EMP from the bold nukes half of the running electronics in that side of the house.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @06:31AM (#50352771)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:42AM (#50352233)

      It's cloud computing after all. Of course there will be frequent lighting.

    • That comes to 4.84 Jiggawatts! No wonder there was outage.
    • Somebody was on the roof wearing armour and yelling "Gods a bastard!"
    • Re:Oh realy? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @09:30AM (#50353797)

      Lightning striking in the same spot repeatedly is a lot more likely than people think. The reason lightning may have struck a spot is due to there being a good path. Thus lightning is likely to strike that easy path again.

      We have that. We live on a mountain where there is a large copper vein running under us. I have watched lightning strike repeatedly in the same spot.

      There are videos of lightning repeatedly striking tall buildings during a single storm.

      More over, lightning does not need to be very close to do a lot of damage. In a recent storm we had nine nearby strikes - not all in the same spot but spread out over at least a square mile of our land. We lost many miles of wire because of the EMP that the lightning strikes generated got picked up by the wires and overloaded them causing the wires to melt. Some sections of fence wire simply vanished. Google could have had a few nearby strikes that did that. This happens.

      See:
      http://sugarmtnfarm.com/2015/0... [sugarmtnfarm.com]
      and
      http://sugarmtnfarm.com/2015/0... [sugarmtnfarm.com]

      • If you don't get directly hit by lightning, it can still do a lot of damage to things... There are two ways this happens...

        1. Induced currents into wires close to the strike - This is where the huge amounts of current flowing into the ground from the lighting strike induces currents in other wires. It's basically cross talk, but with a really large impulse input in one wire, you get some pretty impressive signals in parallel wires. This is what fries your corded phones and electronics which are plugged

    • at some point in your life, have you ever listened to AM radio or broadcast television? their stuff gets hit with lightning all the time. if a really good thunderstorm happens to float over their tower, AM radio tends to sound like "Weather Desk Radar shows the //SPLATbzzHummm// county, with //SPLATbzzHummm// t's the latest repor //SPLATbzzHummm//" with the transmitter knocked off the air every few seconds by a direct hit. in NTSC television, the return would be about 3-4 seconds of variable contrast an

  • by LatePaul ( 799448 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:32AM (#50352195)

    ... Alphabet's new "personal re-vivification" project is making good progress. The project leader, V.Frankenstein was unavailable for comment however.

  • You mean to tell me users data is stored in a SINGLE DC and not redundant elsewhere?

    I find that easy to believe for most "cloud" providers but google? Really?
    Ummmmmmmm?
    So presumably if someone took out the right, big big DC in a huge fasion, many users would be fucked by it?

  • by Dave Whiteside ( 2055370 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @02:50AM (#50352259)

    n/t

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I bet that sent a shockwave
    • No I think this was using Thunderbolt

      • by Bongo ( 13261 )

        Oh wait, I never realised my Lightning connector was for charging my iPhone outdoors.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Witness said "it was like a silver light"

  • But google said that that it [techworld.com] "....replicates data three times for redundancy. It can afford to be cavalier about hardware failures. So a drive fails. Log it, switch queries on that data to a replica and move on. It's all pretty instant".
    • That article is not about the Google Compute Cloud though.
  • And a mad scientist with a cobbled together corpse.

  • location location location ... all data should be replicated in at least THREE locations around the world.
  • by smallfries ( 601545 ) on Thursday August 20, 2015 @04:50AM (#50352559) Homepage

    Come on people. This has the potential to be legend... ary. What a complete failure.

    Even just form a quick punt we could glimpse such lyrical word play as:
    "Lightning strike inside Cloud"
    "Cloud damaged by lightning"
    "Cloud not lightning-proof"

    Please read the fucking Register until you gets it.

  • This is why you need offsite backups, preferably on hardware under your own direct control.
    • Administered by a skilled storage, hardware, and network team. Training up such a team and keeping them employed, without managerial or technical errors destroying the whole system, for years, is far beyond the skills of most IT departments.

      I've built such offsite storage: I've helped people recover from the _inevitable_ sitewide disasters that overwhelm reasonable protections. Much like running your own mail server, Google has consistently outperformed and outlasted single company systems. Bulk data storag

  • That's why you don't put things in the cloud, put them in the aether.
  • 'What, like with a cloth or something?"
  • Despite the uncontrollable nature of the incident, Google has accepted full responsibility for the blackout and promises to upgrade its data center storage hardware, increasing its resilience against power outages.

    If it is uncontrollable, then any changes Google makes won't matter. On the other hand, if using other equipment, hardening the system, installing better grounding, etc. would have kept the loss from happening, then it is controllable. Maybe what they meant to say was unpredictable. Of course, then they would have had to explain why they didn't plan for the possibility.

    • No, not really. As I understand this, what happened is they experienced multiple failures of the AC power coming into the facility which happened to be lighting induced. When the power went out the first few times, the UPS's switched to battery power and everything kept going as the batteries provided the necessary power. Eventually, after repeated dependence on the UPS batteries during the multiple failures, the batteries had no more power left and the UPS output power stopped.

      This is really a process

  • If I understand this correctly, to get your personal data removed from Google search engines it requires 4 lightning strikes to the exact same location?

    Must have missed that part in the EULA...

  • Well that what Google gets for building a data center at the top of castle Frankenstein.

"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors

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