![]() That said, I would be failing in my mission unless I mentioned end to end encryption. They have multiple layers of redundancy, and the data is also replicated between multiple data centers, in case one of them falls into a California earthquake ![]() I will go as far as to say, doing your own backups is a waste of time. I have never lost any data with Evernote. Then there is no history, and no copies, and you truly lose your changes The only time to be concerned is if you have a bunch of un-sync'd data, and your drive dies. And if you do corrupt just the text, then you can recover it with history If your hard drive just has some kinda fit and randomizes the data on disk, it likely won't sync. So only if you "corrupt" the data by means of overwriting note content (in a valid way), will it sync. They validate each note and update you send, to make sure it's correctly structured. It's difficult to send corrupt data to the servers. Like others have said, you can always get a fresh copy from EvernoteĮvernote stores about 4-8 copies of each note at any given timeĮvernote also stores note history, so if somehow your note itself was overwritten, you would be able to dig out old versions ![]() This is indeed nothing to worry about, unless you have offline-only data. ![]()
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