![]() If your monthly downloads (egress) are less than or equal to your active storage volume, then your storage use case is a good fit for Wasabi’s free egress policy. To better understand the definition of ‘reasonable rate’ and ‘unreasonable burden’ in this context, please consider these guidelines. Wasabi’s free egress policy is designed for use cases where you store your data with Wasabi, you access this data at a reasonable rate, and your use case does not impose an unreasonable burden on our service. How do I know if Wasabi’s free egress policy is a fit for my use case?.It makes sense for most people's use case. Personally I feel like these terms are completely reasonable. The following is taken directly from their website and is not in the fine print. But I hope in the future Synology will update the app to be done the right way. I did make a work around not to give your Synology full access to all your Vaults. The way they did it dose not allow the right amount of security, not to mention you can't configure the Vault the way you want it using a CloudFormation file. Instead of asking for credentials and a Vault ARN. TL DR: The thing that I did not like about the Synology implementation is that they ask for the credentials and they make a Vault for you. I also recorded the whole process for those that are interested to see how this project came to be, and my findings in details. And to make it easier to others I made a CloudFormation file that can be used by anyone to setup Amazon Glacier in a AWS account with a click of a button. Since I get a reliable of site backup that just work. Overall I like it, it works well, and for sure I'm more at peace with the office files that we store there now. As a weekend project I did take a look at the Amazon Glacier backup app that Synology provides.
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