> Even the cheapest SSDs, say those with QLC NAND, can safely store data for about a year of being completely unpowered. More expensive TLC NAND can retain data for up to 3 years, while MLC and SLC NAND are good for 5 years and 10 years of unpowered storage, respectively.

This is somewhat confused writing. Consumer SSDs usually do not have a data retention spec, even in this very detailed Micron datasheet you won't find it: https://advdownload.advantech.com/productfile/PIS/96FD25-S2T... Meanwhile the data retention spec for enterprise SSDs is at the end of their rated life, which is usually a DPWD/TBW intensity you won't reach in actual use anyway - that's where numbers like "3 months @ 50 °C" or whatever come from.

In practice, SSDs don't tend to loose data over realistic time frames. Don't hope for a "guaranteed by design" spec on that though, some pieces of silicon are more equal than others.

Any given TBW/DWPD values are irrelevant for unpowered data retention. Afaik, nobody gives these values in their datasheet and I'm wondering where their numbers are from, because I've never seen anything official. At this point I'd need to be convinced that the manufacturers even know themselves internally, because it's never been mentioned by them and it seems to be outside the intended use cases for SSDs