Skip to main content

3 posts tagged with "compliance"

View All Tags

Website Backup Retention Policy Guide

· 6 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on May 10, 2026

Website Backup Retention Policy Guide

A restore that fails because the backup is too old is painful. A restore that fails because the needed backup was already deleted is worse. This website backup retention policy guide is here to prevent both problems and help you keep enough history to recover cleanly without storing half the internet forever.

Most backup trouble is not caused by the backup job itself. It comes from weak retention decisions. Teams turn on daily backups, feel safe for three months, and then discover they only kept seven copies. Or they keep everything for a year and pay for storage they do not need, while recovery still takes too long because nobody planned for actual restore use.

Will a VPN Crack Affect Any Jurisdiction Soon?

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on May 3, 2026

Will a VPN Crack Affect Any Jurisdiction Soon?

A lot of business owners ask some version of the same question: does vpn crack will affect any jurisdiction soon? The short answer is yes, but not in the way most people think. A so-called VPN crack is rarely a magic event that suddenly rewrites the law. What actually changes is enforcement, evidence quality, provider obligations, and the confidence regulators have when pursuing users, operators, or businesses that rely on weak assumptions about privacy.

If you run websites, apps, client portals, or distributed teams, this matters because jurisdiction is not just about where your server sits. It is also about where your users are, where your provider operates, what logs exist, and whether a court or regulator can connect activity to a person or company with enough certainty to act.

How Europe Is Trying EU-Built IT Solutions

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on April 23, 2026

How Europe Is Trying EU-Built IT Solutions

For years, many European businesses ran critical workloads on American software, American cloud platforms, and American data stacks without asking too many questions. That has changed fast. If you are watching how Europe trying to implement their own IT solutions developed in the EU not in the USA, the real story is not just politics. It is about operational control, legal exposure, procurement risk, and the simple need to know where your infrastructure depends on someone else.

This matters to small and mid-sized companies more than it first appears. A multinational can absorb compliance friction with a big legal budget. A smaller SaaS provider, agency, retailer, or hosting customer usually cannot. When the underlying stack becomes uncertain, the burden lands on the operations team, the founder, or the one developer who already has too much on their plate.