That's a bit harsh
loudWaterEnjoyer
What is snitchcoin?
lol
lol third picture is best
SPRICH
I will demand more money having the know-how of a lifelong industry professional
The 3-2-1 rule can aid in the backup process. It states that there should be at least 3 copies of the data, stored on 2 different types of storage media, and one copy should be kept offsite, in a remote location (this can include cloud storage). 2 or more different media should be used to eliminate data loss due to similar reasons (for example, optical discs may tolerate being underwater while LTO tapes may not, and SSDs cannot fail due to head crashes or damaged spindle motors since they do not have any moving parts, unlike hard drives). An offsite copy protects against fire, theft of physical media (such as tapes or discs) and natural disasters like floods and earthquakes. Physically protected hard drives are an alternative to an offsite copy, but they have limitations like only being able to resist fire for a limited period of time, so an offsite copy still remains as the ideal choice.
You should change your scope then and stop looking only at the platform but at the technology, because it is the point of breach.
It happened, that P2P users have been sued because lawyers were getting into the share and wrote down the IPs of the other user.
You can't guarantee that there won't be a lawyer logging in, writing down your IP
I wouldn't set the platform as scope but instead peer to peer technology. Looking at that scale there are quite some people being sued. Also being sued in that regard is a case of over protection because you really don't want to be sued, not even once.
Matrix works great, I am in multiple rooms including some with 1983, 1356 or 1120 people