There's some misinformation in this thread.
For a variety of reasons, HDD reliability has decreased in recent years, not least due to the advent of PRML technology, which compresses data far more than in the past, and makes data recovery more difficult. Across the board, HDDs fail in the long run at a greater than 1% per year rate. That's similar to the reliability of old floppy disks.
SSD's are turning out to be somewhat more reliable in the long run, but not hugely better. Sure, the write "runout" is not a problem, but there are many other electronic failure modes. And the scary thing is that when an SSD fails, it tends to fail catastrophically: you lose the entire drive. That's quite rare with HDDs.
If you are running on an SSD and assuming you don't need a backup, you are running on borrowed time. Backups are just as important, if not moreso, than with HDDs.
One very real reliability advantage in some situations: if you need ultra performance, and to get it you used to use a cluster of HDDs, you can replace that cluster with a single SSD. Fewer drives == fewer failures.
Here's a link to one page (key page) of a nicely done investigation into the issue.
Hope this is helpful!