My 2 cents…
A few years ago, I discovered Storj and thought I’d found the perfect backup solution, complete with built-in geographic redundancy. However, I soon encountered a critical drawback: per-segment pricing.
Most of my files are small - office documents, markdown files, and plain text. With Duplicacy default chunk size of 4MB, the per-segment fees added roughly 50% to the storage costs, making it comparable to Backblaze B2 or other S3-compatible services. Increasing the chunk size reduced the segment fees, but this caused storage costs to rise rapidly. Even minor updates to a small office file (a few KB file) generated multiple MB-sized chunks, inflating costs with each backup.
Additionally, Storj’s project-specific password requirement complicated the web interface, often displaying incorrect information and hindering usability. The egress fees, while infrequent, were another frustration. Although I rarely needed to restore or download backups, transferring them between locations after project completion incurred unexpected charges.
Ultimately, managing backups on Storj required significant effort. After struggling with these issues, I switched back to Backblaze B2 for a simpler solution.