Queen La Tiff wrote:
Here I am again with this mean old disc
And you're so far away from me...
I need a certain image and I'm getting pissed
Cause it's so far away from me...
Seriously though, this is a story that's been around a while. There have been fears about the lifespan of CDs (among other digital storage formats) for some years now.
I've seen/heard several programmes about digital archivists voicing fears that a lot of old data and documents that have been painstakingly transferred from paper, vellum, parchment, microfiche and numerous other forms for the sake of "preservation" are now having to be frequently re-copied and updated as digital media formats are in fact more vulnerable to degradation (and of course obsolescence) than other methods.
And the more people (and organisations) transfer their critical data and historical archives
purely to digital format and ditch older forms of backup, the greater this problem is likely to become.
(Not to mention the problems that happen when there is the inevitable "system failure" - as a techie myself, it always annoys me when corporations or government departments blame "computer error" or "I.T." when their whole system goes tits up, when the real problems are greed (oh sorry, "efficiency savings") and poor disaster planning and preparation!)
Moral of the story is that boring but essential data storage mantra:
always make a backup! (And take a hard copy backup too where appropriate/possible)