With the new lower download pricing, customers pay about 1 cent per GB of data to download data for recovery or data migration purposes, regardless of the number of GBs downloaded, he said. Budman told CRN that the 500 petabytes is a good amount of data when one considers that's about half the size stored by Dropbox and about one-fourth the amount of data stored by Facebook.īackblaze charges $0.005 per GB, per month to store data, or about one-fourth the per-GB price of Amazon S3, Google Cloud or Microsoft Azure, Budman said. The data sits on the company's own infrastructure located in multiple co-location facilities. These include New York-based CloudBerry Lab Bellevue, Wash.-based Synology Pomona, Calif.-based Qnap and Walnut Creek, Calif.-based Retrospect.īackblaze currently stores about 500 petabytes of data for customers. Cloud storage provider Backblaze has halved the cost of downloading data from its cloud as a way to make it easier for MSPs and solution providers to provide cloud-based data services.īackblaze is the developer of the Backblaze B2 storage cloud, which is offered as the back-end cloud to a number of storage service provider vendors that sell through channel partners, said Gleb Budman, co-founder and CEO of the San Mateo, Calif.-based company.
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