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	<title>Comments on: Is your church accounting system safe online?</title>
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	<description>Find the Accounting Software you need for your Church</description>
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		<title>By: Jason</title>
		<link>http://www.churchaccountingsoftwareguide.com/is-your-church-accounting-system-safe-online/comment-page-1/#comment-8592</link>
		<dc:creator>Jason</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Sep 2010 21:36:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>In addition to this I will mention that there are risk to systems that are on the Church&#039;s own computers. I am not totally disagreeing about the risk of data online however the post was very one sided and I wanted to ensure that people do not get a false sense of security just because their data is on a server at their church. 

For example, churches get broken into - what is the first thing they steal? - Computers. Where is your data at - on that computer. Another item to look at is natural catastrophe or something like a church building be burned down. The first item that was mentioned was deleting of data if someone gets in. Most companies will do backups of their data. So the deleting is really not a huge issue, however the stealing is. That would be what I would be more worried about. Keep in mind that when things are done online the church is paying for a service and with that service they are hiring the company&#039;s expertise to manage that data probably better than any church would. The churches just don&#039;t have the resources to pay an IT expert 60K+ a year to ensure their data is safe. That is why many go to an online solution to ensure that job is taken care of using only a fraction of the cost.

The second issue can be mitigated a little by going with a company that has been around for awhile and I don&#039;t mean 5 or so years. If they been around for 10+ years it is highly doubtful that they will go out of business. They have gone through the storms so to speak. I am not trying to say none of these point are valid however they also apply to software that is not online. What happens if a company goes out of business and you have their product on your servers? Yeah you have your data but what good is it if you can not get it out of the system into another software package. How about the cost of converting the data to another package. So the issue raised on the post really are not confined to only online systems but both types of systems.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In addition to this I will mention that there are risk to systems that are on the Church&#8217;s own computers. I am not totally disagreeing about the risk of data online however the post was very one sided and I wanted to ensure that people do not get a false sense of security just because their data is on a server at their church. </p>
<p>For example, churches get broken into &#8211; what is the first thing they steal? &#8211; Computers. Where is your data at &#8211; on that computer. Another item to look at is natural catastrophe or something like a church building be burned down. The first item that was mentioned was deleting of data if someone gets in. Most companies will do backups of their data. So the deleting is really not a huge issue, however the stealing is. That would be what I would be more worried about. Keep in mind that when things are done online the church is paying for a service and with that service they are hiring the company&#8217;s expertise to manage that data probably better than any church would. The churches just don&#8217;t have the resources to pay an IT expert 60K+ a year to ensure their data is safe. That is why many go to an online solution to ensure that job is taken care of using only a fraction of the cost.</p>
<p>The second issue can be mitigated a little by going with a company that has been around for awhile and I don&#8217;t mean 5 or so years. If they been around for 10+ years it is highly doubtful that they will go out of business. They have gone through the storms so to speak. I am not trying to say none of these point are valid however they also apply to software that is not online. What happens if a company goes out of business and you have their product on your servers? Yeah you have your data but what good is it if you can not get it out of the system into another software package. How about the cost of converting the data to another package. So the issue raised on the post really are not confined to only online systems but both types of systems.</p>
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