But most likely, you are making backups from legacy storage. Thus, you will never really know your backups are actually good, until you inspect them manually. Though i think you are pretty safe, you would have much more assurance if you were to adopt 3rd generation storage such as ZFS. That allows you to
know your storage is well protected, not
assume.
I am not trying to cause an arguments, just trying to understand the benefit of RAID for a home user.
RAID has only benefit that it can protect against disk failure. But it does not protect against bad sectors or corruption, and still employs legacy 2nd generation filesystems which do not offer any protection to your data at all. It only protects the integrity of the filesystem in case of lost recent writes, such as the loss of data in DRAM chip of a harddrive. That is the only protection you enjoy.
So the benefit of RAID is very marginal - backups are superior. But the benefits of ZFS to home users is much more substantial. Particularly when utilising ZFS' ability to make snapshots of your data.
Redundancy "mitigates" drive failure because there's no downtime during a RAID rebuild - it continues to operate in a degraded state.
The downtime part does not have anything to do with it. Data Availability != Data Protection. Many people - particularly home users - use redundancy to allow their data to survive a disk failure, not to increase Availability (uptime).
You may suggest a backup, but very few people that store 10TB+ of data are willing to spend double the amount of money on 1:1 backups. And they do not need to. If they have a reliable storage solution they can do without backups for the bulk data, only using backups for their most precious data such as personal photos, documents, etc.
RAID - and ZFS, for that matter - doesn't protect against data loss due to human error, scripts run amok, etc.
Actually, ZFS does or at least can protect against viruses, human error and other risks that traditionally a backup was the only defence against. ZFS employs snapshots so you make a point in time you can return to, much like a backup can. Even if a virus infects all your files or you accidentally delete that important folder, ZFS with snapshots can save the day!
The doctrine
RAID is not a backup is outdated because both RAID, ZFS and backups have overlapping protections and neither of them protects against all risks. Only a good combination of 3rd generation storage + backups will grant formidable protection to your data.
And again, uptime / availability has nothing to do with it. For home users having the data available 24/7/365 without one hitch is not important. What is important is that they do not lose their data. The data has to survive time, not be available at any point in time. Or at least, that is not their prime concern. They would happily save a lot of money to accept 99% availability instead of 99,9999%. But they do not want to lose their valuable data.
HA (clustered) storage systems exist (both for SAN and NAS applications), but they're still using disks arranged in fundamentally RAID-like arrangements.
You do not need RAID or ZFS or redundancy for high availability. The fact that often such configurations are used is only because of the combination of the benefits of redundancy and availability, not because it is a necessity to have redundancy with High Availability.
He just really, really likes ZFS.
It's a religious thing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad_hominem