Do you backup your backups? And backup your backup backups? You have to draw the "good enough" line somewhere, and to most people, Google backing up their stuff is backed up enough.
Sure, and that's why we're moving off Google for hosted Apps.
I entirely agree- When things are mission critical to you, you need them in an environment where you can control it, back it up properly, and ensure it stays up.
We're not a priority to Google (Understandably.)
For things that really matter to your company, you should bring them in-house, so you can ENSURE they're backed up, and available when necessary. At least that way when things do fail, you can make fixing it a top priority, rather than a nice-to-have.
I don't follow. Why does the fact that you have to do your own backups mean that you can't use Google (or, conversely, why does using Google mean that you can't do your own backups)?
You certainly can pay to use Google Documents and do your own backups. It's just that doing so would defy the biggest appeal of the service. The appeal is that Google handles day-to-day operations for you.
There's more to "day-to-day operations" than backups.
The reality is that Google is much less likely to damage or lose your data than you are, but it's always good to keep extra copies around locally. This is important for many reasons, like access when either Google or your whole net connection is unavailable, and more flexibility with the data.
I think you are unfairly contrasting he flaws of something that exists against he perfection of something you want to exist.
In-house IT fails plenty of the time also, and plenty of organization cannot afford to fix some failures. One must consider the probabilities in all cases.
key, I think, is to make sure that more than one entity needs to screw it up. If it's really important, make that three entities. But the point is, if google hosts your email, make sure you have backups somewhere else.
Personally, I think this applies to yourself, too. As much as possible, make it difficult for you to overwrite your own backups before they expire. If possible, encrypt and outsource.
"You always backup" is an oversimplification. If you run a medium-size company, chances are, you don't back up stuff yourself. Instead, you pay someone else to do it. You trust them to do it right. This article raises a good question. Why can't you trust Google to do it right as well?
You should always have at least 2 different backups, one on site and one off site (disaster recovery) these are completely separate from "it's in the cloud so I don't have to worry about it." And this is why I personally dislike "the cloud" because too many people rely on it and don't have a proper plan in place. You can rely on it sure, but don't only rely on it.
A decent hoster or mail service provider takes care of that for you. They have at least 2 different backups, one on site and one off site. You don't take care of that yourself and the backup is entirely transparent to you. This is why service providers can make money: because they can take care of things for you. It is their raison d'être. Taking care of that yourself is as ridiculous as hosting the email servers yourself. It's not cost effective anymore. The only conclusion from this story is that Google is not a decent hoster or email service provider. The company using them can be excused for expecting better service and they are rightfully moving their business elsewhere.
And to address who does it, it doesn't matter. Someone in the company should be in charge of doing the backups. If no one else will, then take it upon yourself to do so. If you have a medium sized company, someone in your IT department should be doing it. And if you are a large company, there is simply no excuse.
Because it seems to be a foreign concept in this day and age, I will repeat it again.
You always backup.