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Carbonite

★★★★ 1.0 · 2 Reviews

What is Carbonite?

About Carbonite Carbonite, an OpenText company, offers all the tools necessary for protecting data from the most common forms of data loss, including ransomware, accidental deletions, hardware failures and natural disasters. From automated computer backup to comprehensive protection for physical and virtual server environments, Carbonite ensures the accessibility and resiliency of data for any system. What is Carbonite? Carbonite® began in 2005 as the answer to the question: "Why can't there be an easy and affordable way to back up files online?" Founded as a company serving primarily homes and small business users, Carbonite now protects data for more than 1.1 million customers and organizations. In 2016 and 2017, Carbonite acquired EVault and Double-Take Software, expanding Carbonite's data protection portfolio and providing enterprise-grade solutions. In 2019, Carbonite acquired Webroot, which created comprehensive approach to endpoint protection through cloud-based cybersecurity, paired with cloud-based backup and recovery. Carbonite was acquired by OpenText, a global leader in Enterprise Information Management, in 2019. Together, we are a market leader in cyber resilience, offering total endpoint protection and disaster recovery for any sized business.

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Carbonite Reviews (2)

1.0
★★★★
2 reviews
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★0
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★2

Review Summary

Generated using AI from real user reviews

Carbonite has serious problems with data restoration and payment processing that leave users stranded.

Both reviewers gave the lowest rating and encountered critical failures. The first user discovered that Carbonite does not help restore or import backed-up data to new computers—a task many assume the backup service would handle—and instead suggests paying a third party. The second user faced a payment system loop that prevented them from renewing their subscription and subsequently locked them out of their own files, with customer service unable to resolve the issue or process payment manually.

While the first review suggests the actual backup functionality worked ("I used the backup.....all good"), both experiences point to fundamental gaps in service. One involves unclear responsibility around data migration; the other reveals a critical failure in billing infrastructure that directly prevents account access. Neither reviewer offers any positive aspects of the software itself.

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