Has anyone used Wasabi Hot Storage?

I am looking for a place to store a ~5 terabytes of data (for now, I expect it to grow). One of those fancy AI search tools suggested Wasabi Hot Storage, which appears to be an S3 compatible storage bucket. They look intriguing: $7 per tb per month without egress or API fees. It seems like there are some upsides and downsides:

Upsides:
S3 compatible
No having to manage individual servers - (maybe not an upside if you have to manage cache servers)
Unlimited bandwidth without API fees
Seem to have been around for at least a year and aren't just a summer vacation host

Downsides:
More expensive than BuyVM or dedicated server options
Where is there data located -- is the data secure from prying eyes?

I didn't see it on bikegremlin's list of cloud providers, so that's why I'm asking if anyone else has had experience with them.

Comments

  • You can set where you want your data stored location wise. Just encrypt it and they can't see it.

    Recommended hosts:
    Letbox, Data ideas, Hetzner

  • Looks good. Are they new in the market?

  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOGContent Writer

    Haven't listed them - that's true.

    I know a guy who's happy with it for years now (in terms of upload & download speed, & uptime).

    Could be the optimal choice.

    Depends on what you need the storage for.

    Thanked by (1)rockinmusicgv
  • @bikegremlin said: I know a guy who's happy with it for years now (in terms of upload & download speed, & uptime).

    Those are basically the three most important things when it comes to storage so that's good news.

    Thanked by (1)bikegremlin
  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOGContent Writer

    @rockinmusicgv said:

    @bikegremlin said: I know a guy who's happy with it for years now (in terms of upload & download speed, & uptime).

    Those are basically the three most important things when it comes to storage so that's good news.

    They also don't chagre extra for egress, while Hetzner Object storage which may be cheaper "on paper" will charge extra for that, and may end up being more expensive in total.

    Backblaze can be rather slow in my experience, so that is a downside, despite perhaps lower pricing (though they do charge egress too).

  • @rockinmusicgv said: Has anyone used Wasabi Hot Storage?

    They are being recommended as a BackBlaze alternative from time to time, but not so frequently.

    Unlimited bandwidth without API fees

    I believe someone mentioned they may start complaining if your monthly BW gets over like 20-30 × your data size.

    @imok said:
    Are they new in the market?

    No.
    IIRC, @jarland been using them for quite a while.

    Thanked by (2)imok bikegremlin

    StorageAMD EPYC VDS (ref) up to 4TB NVMe & 10TB SAN disk / NVMe + big HDD storage VPS (ref) from $2.29/TB/mo

  • Nice, hopefully I don't need DataRecovery

    Thanked by (1)DataRecovery
  • havochavoc OGContent WriterSenpai

    @imok said:
    Looks good. Are they new in the market?

    Nope. 8 year old company

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasabi_Technologies

    iirc they were the wave of companies trying to challenge AWS's S3 before B2 was created

    Thanked by (2)bikegremlin imok
  • @DataRecovery said: I believe someone mentioned they may start complaining if your monthly BW gets over like 20-30 × your data size.

    I should've read the FAQs before posting:

    If your monthly egress data transfer is greater than your active storage volume, then your storage use case is not a good fit for Wasabi’s free egress policy.

    If your use case exceeds the guidelines of our free egress policy on a regular basis, we reserve the right to limit or suspend your service.

    Thanked by (1)imok
  • @imok said:
    Nice, hopefully I don't need DataRecovery

    I really hope so.

    Though equally painful, a ton of wasabi could still be cheaper.

    Thanked by (1)imok

    StorageAMD EPYC VDS (ref) up to 4TB NVMe & 10TB SAN disk / NVMe + big HDD storage VPS (ref) from $2.29/TB/mo

  • Everyone considering Wasabi should take a look at https://wasabi.com/pricing/faq . Each month they'll bill for minimum 1TB, even if you only have 50KB stored with them, and they'll bill for 90 days of storage even if you delete your 50KB after 5 minutes.

    Thanked by (3)bikegremlin havoc imok
  • havochavoc OGContent WriterSenpai
    edited November 8

    nvm - wrong thread

  • I started a Piefed server in September and use Wasabi for storage. One of the reasons I went with them is due to their partnership with CloudFlare and free egress. No complaints so far!

    Where is there data located -- is the data secure from prying eyes?

    USA

    us-east-1 (N. Virginia) Iron Mountain, 11680 Hayden Rd, Manassas, VA 20109, USA
    us-east-2 (N. Virginia) Same
    us-central-1 (Texas) Flexential, 3500 E Plano Pkwy, Plano, TX 75074, USA
    us-west-1 (Oregon) Flexential, 5737 NE Huffman St, Hillsboro, OR 97124, USA
    us-west-2 (California) Stack Infrastructure, 2001 Fortune Dr, San Jose, CA 95131, USA
    ca-central-1 (Canada) Equinix TR6, 30 Bramt-tree Court, Brampton, ON L6S 5Z7, Canada

    Europe/Middle East/Africa

    eu-central-1 (Amsterdam) Equinix AM4, Science Park, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1098 XH
    eu-central-2 (Frankfurt) Equinix FR2, Friesstrasse 26 / Entrance via Kruppstrasse 121-127, 60388 Frankfurt, Germany
    eu-west-1 (UK) Equinix LD7, 1 Banbury Ave, Slough SL1 4LH, United Kingdom
    eu-west-3 (UK) Digital Realty LHR13, Fountain Court, Cox Lane, Chessington KT9 1SJ, United Kingdom
    eu-west-2 (Paris) Equinix PA3, 114 Rue Ambroise Croizat, Saint Denis 93200, France
    eu-south-1 (Milan) Retelit Irideos Avalon 3, Via Bisceglie 95, Milano MI 20152, Italy

    Asia-Pacific

    ap-northeast-1 (Tokyo) NTT DOCOMO BUSINESS, TK10, 5 Chome-1-12 Shimorenjaku, Mitaka, Tokyo 181-0013, Japan
    ap-northeast-2 (Osaka) NTT DOCOMO BUSINESS, OS7, 3-2 Odatoshibacho, Ibaraki City, Osaka 567-0013, Japan
    ap-southeast-1 (Singapore) Equinix SG4, 7 Tai Seng Drive, Singapore 535218
    ap-southeast-2 (Sydney) Equinix SY5, Unit B, 200 Bourke Road, Alexandria, Sydney NSW 2015, Australia

    Source: https://docs.wasabi.com/v1/docs/where-is-my-data-stored-and-how-are-wasabis-storage-regions-secured

  • Please, stop. I don't need to buy this.

  • bingobangobongobingobangobongo Hosting Provider

    @quicksilver03 said:
    Everyone considering Wasabi should take a look at https://wasabi.com/pricing/faq . Each month they'll bill for minimum 1TB, even if you only have 50KB stored with them, and they'll bill for 90 days of storage even if you delete your 50KB after 5 minutes.

    THIS. Whatever you store and then delete - even if for 3 seconds, they maintain archive of and bill you for 3 months. I tried them for some tertiary VirtFusion backups and it ended up being like 5x the cost of Backblaze. In the end it was far cheaper to deploy another node of my own with MinIO on it.

    Rock Solid Web Hosting, VPS & VDS with a Refreshing Approach - Xeon Scalable, DDoS protection and Enterprise Hardware! HostBilby Inc.

  • @imok said: Are they new in the market?

    I heard advertisements for them ~15 years ago (on Steve Gibson's podcast before SQRL was anounced), so they're relatively new but not that new. I recall they used to put/requested custom firmware on SMR HDD's for cold storage, but maybe that's not what they do with hot storage.

    @rockinmusicgv said: is the data secure from prying eyes?

    Somewhat off topic (and a genuine question) : is that true for VPS? I can encrypt storage, but would a VPS be a safe stepping stone for SSH access to other locations?

  • @wankel said:
    Somewhat off topic (and a genuine question) : is that true for VPS? I can encrypt storage, but would a VPS be a safe stepping stone for SSH access to other locations?

    I'd say the short answer is "well maybe." But taking a step back, if the host isn't exposing the processor-based memory encryption into the VM, then even your encrypted file system isn't as secure as it should be...

  • @rockinmusicgv said: if the host isn't exposing the processor-based memory encryption into the VM

    In either case, would in-memory processes be safe from prying eyes? Can SSH keys easily be sniffed, if the hoster is inclined do listen in on what's happening on their servers?

  • bingobangobongobingobangobongo Hosting Provider

    I’d say if you’re at the point of those things being a concern - then a shared platform in VPS/VDS likely isn’t the optimum path for you.

    Rock Solid Web Hosting, VPS & VDS with a Refreshing Approach - Xeon Scalable, DDoS protection and Enterprise Hardware! HostBilby Inc.

  • @wankel said:
    In either case, would in-memory processes be safe from prying eyes? Can SSH keys easily be sniffed, if the hoster is inclined do listen in on what's happening on their servers?

    The intention of TDX is to provide memory safety to VM processes for trustable computing, but echoing bingobangobongo, a shared platform may not the be the best route for someone who needs to be in total control of their security.

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