How long will a "safely stored" Solid-State-Drive (SSD) keep its data? (e.g. bank safety-deposit box)

Posted by user31575 on Super User See other posts from Super User or by user31575
Published on 2012-08-31T15:37:43Z Indexed on 2012/08/31 15:42 UTC
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Here's my usecase:

  • once-and-only-once copy off photos/videos to an internal SATA Solid State Drive (SSD)
  • put this drive in a well-ventilated, air-conditioned bank "safety deposit box" for safe keeping

The question:

  • How long can I safely store a solid-state-drive in such an environment? i.e. 0% bitrot, 100% success when "plugged in"

  • Are some SSD drives more reliable than other for this usecase? (e.g. smaller size vs larger size, SLC vs MLC, different brands, etc)

More fodder:

  • I have read that solid state memory cards (e..g compactflash, or sd cards) have much longer durability than other media (DVD's, CD's, hard drives) for this usecase (guaranteed against bitrot/other dysfunction on the order of ~ a decades vs a year ). I don't know if this applies to "SSD hard drives".

  • Copying to one 500Gb ssd vs 8 64gb flash drives is easier

  • SSD SATA hard drives have no moving parts, but they have more "visible electronics" than a compact flash card. I don't know if this "visible electronics" can fail, i.e. in contr

I know many will point to carbonite, other cloud backup stuff, but I like the simplicity of having physical copies and wanted to understand the risks/implications

thanks,

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