As an Atlassian Admin, you’ve likely felt that sudden spike in adrenaline when Jira slows to a crawl. You check the status page. Everything is green. You check Twitter. Users are complaining. You’re caught in a "Gray Failure," where the system is technically "up," but practically useless.
Recent incidents on major cloud providers have proven that "the cloud" isn't a monolith of uptime. It’s a complex web, and when one strand snaps, your business continuity is on the line. At Revyz, we don’t just talk about backups; we talk about Resilience.
Here is our three-tiered blueprint for surviving the "Invisible Outage."
Tier 1: The Tactical Pivot (Jira/Confluence Site Outages)
We’ve seen scenarios where a regional provider has a hiccup. Your production site is glitching, but your Sandbox remains responsive.
- The Problem: You’re stuck in a holding pattern waiting for a global fix while your dev team sits idle.
- The Revyz Pivot: By using our Disaster Recovery (DR) Connection, you can bypass the broken site. Simply paste your secure token into a secondary "warm" site.
- The Win: Your team continues viewing and interacting with work items through the Revyz end-user portal. You aren't waiting for a "restore", you’re just switching lanes.
Tier 2: The Infrastructure Blackout (Total Atlassian Downtime)
- The Scenario: What happens if the entire Atlassian platform goes dark? In this scenario, even your secondary sites are unreachable.
- The Problem: Your data is trapped inside a platform you can’t log into.
- The Revyz Pivot: Released at the start of Q1 this year, we have introduced a dedicated access environment that allows you to authenticate and access your data completely outside of the Atlassian ecosystem. Within this independent interface, you can safely browse your site’s data from any historical snapshot.
- The Win: Even if Atlassian is offline, your data isn't. You maintain visibility and business intelligence regardless of the platform’s pulse.
Tier 3: The "Zero-Trust" Contingency (Cloud-Wide Failure)
- The Scenario: This is the ultimate test: Atlassian is down, and the underlying cloud infrastructure is facing a catastrophic event. Perhaps your organization is even moving toward a "Cloud-Exit" strategy.
- The Problem: Total reliance on third-party infrastructure.
- The Revyz Pivot: Offline Access. We believe in true data sovereignty. Our Offline Access feature allows you to automatically export your data to your own independent data storage.
- The Win: This data is stored in a human-readable format. You can host these exports on a local server. Whether the cloud is down or you’ve decided to leave it, your data remains yours—accessible, portable, and ready to go.
Contact the Revyz team today to get started.
- Does "Cloud Hosting" automatically mean my data is compliant?
No. Providers secure the infrastructure, but you remain responsible for data residency, retention, and granular recovery under the Shared Responsibility Model.
- Why is Atlassian’s native backup often insufficient for enterprises?
Native tools lack the point-in-time recovery and long-term immutability required to restore specific data lost to accidental deletions or "Gray Failures."
- What is the difference between data privacy and data sovereignty?
Privacy dictates how you handle data, while sovereignty (via BYOS) ensures you maintain legal and physical control over where it resides.
- How does "Configuration Drift" impact my disaster recovery?
Untracked changes to Jira settings create a "silent decay" where even a data restore won't work because the underlying system architecture has changed.
- Can manual data exports replace an automated backup strategy?
No. Manual exports are point-in-time snapshots that lack the audit trails, automation, and 24/7 reliability needed for modern compliance and rapid recovery.
- Does Atlassian’s native backup satisfy the SEC Rule 17a-4 'human-readable' requirement?
Not natively. While Atlassian provides data exports, they are often in complex JSON or XML formats. To be compliant, firms must be able to transform this metadata into navigable, human-readable formats like PDF or HTML for auditors.
- "What is the 'Alternative Undertaking' permitted under SEC Rule 17a-4(i) for cloud storage?"
Following the 2022 amendments, cloud service providers can use an "Alternative Undertaking" if the firm maintains independent, direct access to its records without the provider's intervention—often achieved through air-gapped, customer-controlled storage.
For more: Closing the Resilience Gap: Meeting SEC 17a-4 Human-Readable Standards in Atlassian Cloud
- "How does the German BDSG-new Section 26 impact SaaS providers differently than the standard GDPR?"
While GDPR provides the floor, Germany’s Section 26 of the BDSG-new imposes much stricter limits on the processing of employee data, requiring SaaS platforms to be more restrictive with HR and productivity metrics.
- "What are the 'GoBD' requirements for data relevant to German taxes?"
The GoBD mandates that any tax-relevant data must be immutable, traceable, and audit-proof. This means data cannot simply be overwritten; every change must be logged and versioned, and records must generally be kept for 10 years.
For more: Beyond the Privacy Shield: Mastering German SaaS Data Compliance
The Bottom Line: Resilience is a Choice
A status dashboard is not a disaster recovery plan. Real resilience means having a way to work when the lights go out. Moving from a reactive posture to a resilient one means bridging the gap between native cloud limitations and true data sovereignty. Don't wait for a disaster to discover where your backups end and your risks begin.