this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2025
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Man the more I read about this the more I’m on synologys side.
I remember smart being only as reliable as the last set of hands it passed through, but there was a reselling scam going on where people would reset the smart data of seagate drives. It got detected because those drives have their own proprietary, possibly read only store of usage data.
The same thing could be going on with other manufacturers but we dont know because either they don’t have that or their unique mshrs in smart are getting cleared.
So smart can’t tell you if there’s been supply chain attack on your drives.
What would a reasonable high end manufacturer of devices do? The same thing apple gets hate for: close the gates to out of channel equipment.
As I said before, I don’t particularly like synology or use any of their shit but they really seem to be the good guys here. If it was some bottom of the barrel AOMII (iirc aomii makes decent shit, it’s just an example) doodad I would understand the upset, but these are the people you pay to not have to actually understand networking or linux.
I do think it’s looking grim for affordable storage once again. Spinning drives are losing their applicability in industry as flash prices fall and expectations rise. We’re probably at peak quality and reliability for these things and they’re likely to get worse out of the box as time goes on.