Thanks.I'd keep it for a while. If your buyer (or someone downstream) has an issue with the title, they can likely come after you for five years.
Eh...how long is the computer going to work and be available to retrieve the item? I'd just keep the closing packet in a safe place.Scan it on to your computer, keep it forever, and forget about it.
It depends on your backup & retrieval systemEh...how long is the computer going to work and be available to retrieve the item? I'd just keep the closing packet in a safe place.
True, the backup and retrieval system matters but still, your backup and retrieval system only works as long as the software is still compatible with the hardware. We guarantee that we can store things for 10 years and still retrieve them, but we don't guarantee any longer than that, even though we are at about 14 years right now. I haven't had a computer last more than 5 years at home. Sure I could store things on memory sticks, but if ten years from now memory sticks are obsolete, I might have a hard time retrieving that data.It depends on your backup & retrieval system
I sis not considere the closing packages as I have not unearthed them from the non-filing system I have used for over 50 years df married life.Eh...how long is the computer going to work and be available to retrieve the item? I'd just keep the closing packet in a safe place.
I agree with you.True, the backup and retrieval system matters but still, your backup and retrieval system only works as long as the software is still compatible with the hardware. We guarantee that we can store things for 10 years and still retrieve them, but we don't guarantee any longer than that, even though we are at about 14 years right now. I haven't had a computer last more than 5 years at home. Sure I could store things on memory sticks, but if ten years from now memory sticks are obsolete, I might have a hard time retrieving that data.
Computers are wonderful things but anything truely important goes into the safety deposit box in hard copy.