It's A Digital Disease!

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This is a sub that aims at bringing data hoarders together to share their passion with like minded people.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/harbourhunter on 2025-06-06 00:08:22.

on Amazon right now

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/NolanC23 on 2025-06-05 17:19:33.

What tools or methods can I use to get content from Amazon Prime and save it on my PC? I’ve tried all other ways but I can’t find the content I’m looking for anywhere else to download. Please be helpful I don’t wanna hear “Just torrent it” or something like that”why didn’t he just google it” I can’t find anywhere and need help getting it from the one place that still has it and you guys are my only hope. Please any help is appreciated!

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/H2OKing89 on 2025-06-06 03:40:40.

Alright, fellow light novel and anime fans, buckle up—because I just stumbled into what might be the wildest Audible bug/glitch of the year, and Libation (my trusty audiobook downloader) is running hotter than Rudy’s magic after a pep talk from Roxy.

Here’s what went down:

  1. Audible is having a massive sale right now (seriously, it’s “hide your wallet” big).
  2. I was already on a pre-order binge—mostly Yen Audio stuff. Life was good.
  3. Naturally, after cleaning up the Yen store, I checked out Seven Seas Siren to see if there was anything spicy to pre-order or add to my collection.

And then it got weird…

Instead of the usual “Buy” or “Pre-order” options, every Seven Seas Siren audiobook—no matter which one—just shows up with “Play” or “Add to Library.” No price, no credit option. Just click, and boom, it’s in your library.

So, like any curious light novel collector (and professional bug-magnet), I click “Add to Library” on a few… and it works. I hit “Play”—it plays. At this point, my laptop is working overtime, Libation is offloading everything straight to my Unraid SMB share, and I’m staring at a digital haul bigger than Rudy’s spellbook stash.

Important note: This seems to be working only for Audible Plus members. (I’ve got Plus. A friend with a free account only sees the regular $19.95 price.) So, if you’re just using a free account, you’ll probably see normal pricing. But if you have Plus (or even a free trial), check it out—this is the whole Seven Seas Siren catalog, just sitting there, free for the taking. Not region-locked, not just “included with Plus,” just… there. All of it.

Just for context, if you wanted to buy all 30 Mushoku Tensei audiobooks at $19.95 each, you’d be out $598.50 before tax. Meanwhile, Plus is $14.95 for a month. So, if you’re ever gonna use that free trial, now’s the time.

TL;DR: Seven Seas Siren audiobooks on Audible are showing up as “Play/Add to Library” (no purchase needed)—at least for Plus members. I may or may not have “liberated” the full set. Is this a Plus bug? Some publisher promo gone wild? Who knows—but it’s absolutely bonkers.

If Audible comes for me, just tell them I was reincarnated in another world and can’t return their audiobooks. 😇

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/veridiux on 2025-06-06 00:59:56.

I have a server that's been in a thrown-together rig for a while, but I'm upgrading it to add another 40tb, and I'm now in need of a new case to support the upgrade. I'll have a total of 8hdd, but I would like to add more in the future. Do you have any good recommendations on cases? The cheaper, the better.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/BossHogGA on 2025-06-06 00:45:02.

A friend of mine wanted to watch an old movie he only has on VHS, but none of us have a VCR that works anymore. I found what looks like it used to be a copy on archive.org (https://www.reddit.com/r/MediaDungeon/comments/1656034/galaxies//_are//_colliding//_1992//_film//_horizon//_free/) but the page has since been taken down.

Please NOTE**, I am NOT asking for you to give me a copy of this or any other movie**.

Is there a backup of archive.org somewhere for old content like this, that can't be streamed anywhere, and can't be purchased anywhere? I wish I'd been archiving some of this data years ago, but just built my NAS a few months ago. It would be unfortunate if content was just lost forever.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/ElectricalGuava1971 on 2025-06-06 00:39:58.
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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/d0ct0r on 2025-06-06 00:24:40.

Hi all!

I recently picked up a used 4TB WD Gold for my main PC. I plugged it in to my PC, and the drive isn't being detected. When I power on the PC, the drive appears to spin up, before eventually spinning down and shutting off. The SATA port and cable I'm using is 100% working. Also, the drive sounds OK, there is no click of death or anything else of the sort. Does anyone know what the issue could be?

Thanks!

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Human-Statement-4083 on 2025-06-06 00:20:32.

Getting some bigger drives on my dns 323. Does it make sense to create a single raid 1 file system or more than 1? Where do I install packages. I assume ext4 is sufficient?

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/NateUrBoi on 2025-06-06 00:08:09.

Right now I’ve got a NAS running SHR with 4x 18TB drives. I’ve heard RAID isn’t enough and while I agree, everything is just so expensive. Am I expected to buy an additional 50TB worth of cold storage? Are all cloud storage providers abhorrently expensive with this amount of data? I’m only storing non-personal media files meaning they are replaceable so I’m not too worried about it, but I’d still like to know if I’m missing something. Thanks.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Lewchube on 2025-06-05 23:33:33.

For context, I predominantly do archival work of all kinds for the Pokémon series, (new and old, scans, assets, etc.) with a small part being the archival of full, high-quality, recordings of the video games for use in online content/media, all for free, and is used by hundreds of creators.

Currently, our best option has been to use the Internet Archive to record entire playthroughs of games— which are recorded, (under our decided best conditions) cut-up/efficiently edited, rendered, then uploaded. Since the majority of games released between 1996 and 2017 were designed for handheld hardware, this approach has worked fairly well— as the IA allows us to store largely uncompressed footage that we can directly download, even being able to downscale our recordings back to the game's original resolution (say, 160x144px) for pixel-perfect accurate screenshots. Entire runs range from 25 GB total (Game Boy) to roughly 75 GB, (GBA) which is fairly small considering that they're decently-sized JRPGs.

This approach has held up for modern console footage— with hundreds of hours worth of 2022's Pokémon Scarlet (1920x1080px at 30 FPS) clocked at just over 1 TB. All of this is to say, is that hoarding this data and making it easily accessible via archive.org has been a relatively smooth process, there's never-ever a downscale in quality.

However, a combination of recent scenarios have made me question the viability of this operation for the immediate future. For one thing, the constant legal issues, (and recent security vulnerabilities) archive.org has undergone over the years have worried me in the case of a permanent closure. Still, that alone wouldn't be a huge problem, since I have the space to routinely keep local backups of this content in-case that situation was to ever occur. What compounds this issue is the very sudden technical advancement made by the release of the Nintendo Switch 2— with every future Pokémon entry running at 4K 60 FPS. Suddenly, The Pokémon Company are releasing games whose total footage jumps from 1 TB to 8 TB, and often in pairs, every single year. Since we don't get much of any donations or financial support for our project, storing 16 TB of new-game footage— possibly more— every year is a financial (and logistical) nightmare.

I wanted to run a few options by the sub for advice, and to see if there were any alternative methods that I hadn't considered.

a) We upload 4K/60 FPS footage to YouTube, and IA gets a smaller 1440p/60. Seems like the most viable for maintaining a 4K backup, but I have no idea what an optimal 4K/60 yt-dlp download looks like nor how bad the site's bitrate degradation is for videos at such a high resolution.

b) We move directly to Torrenting and dedicate a couple of people with every new release to seed footage. Obviously comes with the issue that we barely get support as is (despite my audience size) and I'm eternally afraid of one (or both) of those people disappearing and having the content vanish. Would also be significantly harder to access for many people, there would be downtime, etc.

I realize that this post might be missing context or detail in any area so please let me know if there's any more info I can provide!

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/bambashug on 2025-06-05 23:28:13.

Hey everyone (:

I want to take a long trip all over the country, and I wanna store all, if not most, of my personal data and files, I also plan to format my computer and I need to get an HDD asap nontheless.

Currently I use around 1500 GB to 1TB of data all over my platforms.

(I am very strict and worried about losing my data, all of it is on various SSD's.)

I know that my best chance of keeping my data is backing it up on iCloud, Online Drive etc...

But I am also willing to keep it on an external HDD. I heard that the WD Elements HDD's are some of the finest.

What is more realible, in terms of safety? and why?

2x 2TB HDD (and split my current 2tb of data between them, or make copies)

or

1x 4TB HDD (and just trust on this one for the long run)

My ambition is to store it in a room for a long time (around 1-2 years). so please take note.

Thank you very much <3

EDIT 1#

Another thing I forgot to ask is: Does smaller external HDD's are safer than larger ones? Like should I get 2x2TB because its more 'safer' (data-wise) than 2x4TB?

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Broad_Sheepherder593 on 2025-06-05 23:20:16.

Hi,

Planning to make a media server with my DS 423+ and mini pc. I use my mini to download while the nas as storage.

For plex, would you recommend running it on the nas or from my mini pc? Got me thinking as i only have 1 lan port so maybe best to connect it to whichever will host plex.

My nas already has upgraded ram of 6gb and plan to stream max of 3 simultaneously just locally (no open ports)

Thanks!

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/felicaamiko on 2025-06-05 22:32:25.

-f -n works for me in ddrescue, but it's been kind of crawling at 9% recovered for like a week now. so i am kinda scared to touch it. i was told that as long as i create an img and a log you can make multiple passes with different settings and it won't retry sections it has already recovered...

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/JKAF3 on 2025-06-05 22:14:23.

Ok so I have 2x 2TB intel sas ssds

My pc motherboard is a ASUS ROG Strix X670E-F Gaming WiFi

How can I access these SSDs so I can use them as storage? I just want to use them as storage and that’s all

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/JimFrankenstein138 on 2025-06-05 19:17:14.

I partially downloaded a fairly large torrent on a laptop (Sesame Street) and ran out of room. I transferred the data to a large external HD. I then deleted the data from my laptop. I then started downloading the torrent again, this time directing the data to be downloaded on the externalHD. Will the already downloaded data be overwritten or will the 500+ GB data be recognized and only the missing data will be downloaded?

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/TestFlightBeta on 2025-06-05 19:12:52.

I am thinking of getting a few Seagate Expansion drives to put in my room since the Seagate Exos I have from ServerPartDeals are too noisy. Is it worth it to shuck the them to put in my JBOD in exchange for the loss in the 3-year warranty?

| Feature | Seagate Expansion (Shucked) | Seagate Expansion (Unshucked) | Seagate Exo | |


|


|


|


| | Noise | Low | Low | High (twice as much?) | | Price | Similar | Similar | Similar | | Warranty | None / Voided | ~~3 Years~~ 1 year (!!!) | 90 Days or 2 Years | | Connectivity | Requires JBOD | USB Hub + AC Power Source Needed | Requires JBOD |

Edit: just found out the warranty is only 1 year (source). At that point I don't even care about the warranty. Doubt it would stop working within a year.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/SaggyPig4321 on 2025-06-05 17:45:40.
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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/youre_being_illegal on 2025-06-05 17:02:06.

I'm not rich, neither am I particularly clever. I was thinking I could learn on an old second hand server. Upgrade when I know what I'm doing and what I need/want.

Is this a good/bad idea? I would just want storage and access for music, photo's. maybe learn how to run a vm. Generally a little digital playground for me to learn something new to me.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/rexyuan on 2025-06-05 16:59:11.

https://www.techradar.com/pro/mission-impossible-the-final-reckoning-gets-surprise-guest-appearance-a-revolutionary-360tb-silica-storage-media

How far away these alternative material stuff good for cold storage are from coming to the consumer market? And what does it mean for data hoarding?

I think it would make the 2 in the 1-2-3 backup principle become 1 copy stored in your usual drive and 1 copy stored in these kinds of specialized cold storage drive

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Badillaboy on 2025-06-05 16:30:20.

Debating a 20tb external hard drive or a small nas. I want to store my family’s iCloud back up to reduce the charges for larger cloud data. Also I have about 8tb of pictures and small videos for the life of my iOS history. Also we have two gaming pc so was thinking they can be synced to one nas to have like pictures and just data taking up the high speed memory on the gaming pc. Any recommendations on price or should I build a pi nas. Looking at ideas.

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Arcueid-no-Mikoto on 2025-06-05 16:21:11.

So I wanted to download this website:

https://www.mangaupdates.com/

It's a very valuable manga database for me, I can always find mangas I'd like to read by filtering for tags etc. And I'd like to keep it if for whatever reason it goes away one day or they change their filtering system which is pretty good now for me.

Problem is, there's a ton of stuff I'm not interested like https://www.mangaupdates.com/forum

Is there a way I can add like URLs not to download like that one and anything /forum/xxx?

Also is HHTrack a good tool? I used it in the past but it's been a while, so I wonder if there's better ones by now, seems this was updates last in 2017.

Thanks!

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Illustrious_Crab_146 on 2025-06-05 15:47:06.
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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Cultural-Victory3442 on 2025-06-05 14:23:16.

I'm currently thinking about ways to organize my data for easy retrieval of files (given that there's many "categories of files", like, old backup stuff, music, movies, etc).

I have been searching for a tag-based system that could make this process easier. Like, I would be able to find the soundtrack of a movie, without having to put them next to each other in a folder.. I primarily use Linux and I'm curious about the feasibility of implementing a tagging system like this.

Do you think a tag-based approach is practical, maybe using some app for this, or do you just rely on naming conventions and standard file search/tree structure?

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/Necessary_Isopod3503 on 2025-06-05 13:53:02.

This question is for those who are somewhat familiar with burning optical media and/or computer parts and drives in general.

I've started using optical a few years ago and have recently bought a blu-ray reader/burner alongside some other optical readers to burn BDRs, CDs and DVDs, all used except for an USB external DVD drive I use sometimes.

However none of these have been installed internally on my computer, i use them externally with a SATA to USB adapter and additional energy supply from the outlet. They are internal drives, bulky and with that traditional metallic box around it, but being used externally, so far all results of their use are pretty good. I know the SATA to SATA connecting is ideal but it's not possible with my current PC case, it has no place to install an internal drive in and the front has no exit for a drive, only fans, it's a roughly strong PC used in gaming and work as well.

However I have noticed, especially with the BDR drive more than others, that they can get pretty hot when burning discs, the BDR drive probably reaches around +35⁰C or 95F or more when burning a BDR to its full extent, usually a 20min work of constant burning and verification.

The temperatures on the drives have started to concern me because if they got in any trouble because of the temperature affecting the components it would be really hard for me to replace them, especially the BDR drive, they are becoming more rare everyday and more expensive and I might not have the extra cash to buy another one if this one breaks due to long term high temperature.

Has anyone here ever come across this issue? Is it something that I should be concerned about or are the drives perfectly capable of being used like this long term without issues?

To mitigate this issue I bought a somewhat big USB fan directed towards the drives, that are sitting on top of each other and I put some small plastic pieces in between them so that air can reach in between, they aren't touching each other and this the air from the fan can actually cool them down very well, however it cools the external structure of the drive, i have no idea if it actually has any positive effective impact on the internal mechanisms when it comes to the heat inside. Basically the USB fan has become their cooler, but I'm not sure it's an effective solution to this.

I apologize if this is not the right sub for this but I assume some people here might have interesting opinions or insight/experience with optical drives...

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The original post: /r/datahoarder by /u/narutonaruto on 2025-06-05 13:39:14.

I'm an audio engineer and do some video work. I've been using two 6tb thunderbolt gdrives for my "2" backups on the 3-2-1 plan but they're full. I never delete any client work so it's just going to keep growing. I have done a lot of reading here and it seems like getting some enclosures and using Sata drives would be more sustainable moving forward.

I'd like to keep the whole audio backup together as long as possible before segmenting it to multiple drives since I have a lot of returning clients (so keeping track of who is on what backup could become a pain). Video and all that could be on a different drive and make that dream last for a long while.

I just wanted to bounce this off people with more experience before pulling the trigger. Not sure what to look for in an enclosure, I'm thinking sticking with thunderbolt would be nice. I've read to seek out enterprise level drives. Any and all thoughts would be amazing, thank you.

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