Using the ITS CrashPlan backup service for graduate students and post-docs in Stanford Earth.



Last revision May 11, 2015

 
The School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences has purchased access to the University Information Technology Services cloud-based CrashPlan Pro backup service to provide free computer backups to all graduate students and post-docs in all departments and programs in Stanford Earth. This is a "self-service" program. You will follow the instructions listed here to install the CrashPlan Pro software and perform your own file restorations when needed.

Faculty and staff in Stanford Earth normally use the School's own in-house CrashPlan backup service. That page also describes other options for data backup.

After doing the initial full backup, the CrashPlan Pro software continuously checks for new or changed documents and copies them to the cloud backup within a couple of hours of creation, as long as you have a network connection anywhere in the world. This service only backs up your documents, not your operating system or applications, which can be easily re-installed.

Your data is encrypted with a unique key tied to your SUNet ID before it is sent to the cloud backup. Only you (and the system administrators) can access the data backups.

Information Technology Services has created a website to describe how the CrashPlan service works. You should check that website first to answer your questions.

Read these limitations and restrictions before you try to install the CrashPlan service!

Click the Continue button below to answer a brief usage questionnaire and then go to the download page to get the CrashPlan Pro software installers. The questionnaire and download page are restricted to Stanford Earth graduate students and post-docs only; you have to login with your SUNet ID. Others will be denied access. If you are a graduate student or post-doc in a Stanford Earth department or program but are denied access to the download page, please ask your department administrator to verify that you are a member of your department's graduate student or post-doc workgroup.

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