Are USB thumb drives as vulnerable to memory loss and failure as HDD?
USB thumb drives are solid state devices. In electronics, “solid state” means that circuits are built entirely from solid materials, in contrast to other technologies that use vacuum or gas-discharge tubes, or electro-mechanical devices with moving parts. The difference between USB thumbdrives and what is marketed as “SSD” drives is the type of NAND flash memory used (as well as the device capacity, and what interface is used). But, in technical terms, USB thumbdrives are SSDs, as are drives based on volatile memory and software-based storage technologies like RAM disks. As far as “memory loss and failure” vulnerability, solid state devices are not vulnerable to the same failure modes as standard hard drives. They won’t suffer mechanical failure and they can’t be erased by a powerful magnet. Instead, flash memory is vulnerable to other failure modes. Some failure modes can affect both types of drive; EMP, extreme circuit overload (think lightning strike), fire damage, and severe corros