Blaine Russom
A RAID is not a backup, unless it's one of at least two storage systems containing identical data.
A RAID is relatively big, fast storage, and may include certain redundancy features for reliability, but by itself it's not a backup. "RAID=backup" is an oft-repeated misconception. So, to repeat: A RAID by itself is not a backup, unless it's one of at least two storage systems containing identical data.
A backup is a complete, up-to-date, identical copy of your data, on physical media or a remote server, that is separate from your online storage. Backups can be on a variety of media, such as individual hard disk drives, HDDs in a RAID, LTO tape, BluRay or DVD data disks, etc.
Ideally you should have more than one set of backups, with at least one located off-site to protect from disasters such as fire, theft, earthquake, flood, etc.
Whatever data storage technique you're using, one thing is certain: It will fail at some point. If you only have 1 backup of your data, at the moment the original storage system fails, you no longer have a backup: You only have 1 copy of the data on one storage system. There's a very real possibility that whatever physical cause, human error, software or hardware glitch that caused one copy of the file(s) to go missing will cause another copy to meet the same fate soon thereafter. That's why you should always have at least 2 backup copies (in addition to the original data), and keep at least one backup copy off-site.