![]() You can earn more free space in a variety of ways. On mobile devices, if you do not want to use their official Dropbox App, you can use a mobile friendly web interface at m.ĭropbox Basic accounts start with 2 GB of free space. On OSX and Windows, a desktop client is required. Learn about Dropbox for Business.ĭrop box is supported both on mobile devices such as Android, iPhone, iPad, Blackberry and Kindlefire. With Dropbox for Business, get the power and security of Dropbox plus robust admin controls, dedicated support, and all the space you need. Dropbox secures your files with 256-bit AES encryption and two-step verification. Safe and secureĮven if your phone goes for a swim, your stuff is always safe in Dropbox and can be restored in a snap. Everything's automatically private, so you control who sees what. Work with your team like you're using a single computer. Edit docs, automatically add photos, and show off videos from anywhere. Put your stuff in Dropbox and get to it from your computers, phones, or tablets. When I thought about your question, I thought of Dropbox. Bitcasa's "convergent cryptography" also concerned me. That is something quite different from end-to-end. I read about a user of Bitcasa who found that it sends the encryption key to the server in plaintext. If the data stored should be encrypted and supposedly non-accessible by them, how does it make sense? To avoid infringement of the rights of a third party." To comply with any law or order issued by any legal authority.ħ.2. ![]() Third party if Tresorit has a reason to believe that it is required:ħ.1. "You agree that Tresorit may also transmit any data stored by You to a As for as I am concerned, Microsoft should not be considered as trusted. I read that Tresorit's EULA contains that it might use "trusted third-party services" to store my data, "including Microsoft". I already considered Bitcasa and Tresorit, both of which I have some serious problems: If there are such alternatives I would like to choose the one with the best user experience. Just want to see what's the deciding points for one product to the other.Could you please recommend some alternatives to Google Drive? I am concerned about my privacy, security plus I need to have an Android, OS X, and a web client as well. Not trying to bash Tresorit or anyone else. Ease of use (pCloud Sync / Backups) and replacement to some OneDrive features. Not bound to pay them for the next couple of years with subscriptions (still 18 months for me to break even with pCloud - plz don't die). ![]() My requirements were basically not MS or Google. PCloud has a Crypto addon that does encrypt locally before going over the Internet and I've tried to use but with my own setup it's a bit of a moot point. The only noticeable difference for my use cases would be end to end encryption (not sure if Tresorit encrypts clients side before going over the Internet?) and encrypted sharing (I don't need this regularly). I paid pCloud $700 once off for 2TB and would need to use it just over 2 years to break even with something like Tresorit solo plan (that's 500gb more). And the cost of some secure cloud storage, over time, would be crazy. There's things I'll pay monthly and there things I would rather not. My local drive is encrypted, the transfer is encrypted and at rest its 256bit AES. Private stuff I'll transfer to my cloud but end-to-end encryption isn't something I am overly worried about. Out of curiosity what about Tresorit is good for you from a security perspective?įor example, I wanted cloud storage that wasn't OneDrive (I have personal and business but MS can still access my information), and especially not google.įor secret stuff (PKI, Licenses, certs) I locally pop it into a Vera container and upload to my cloud provider in addition to my 2 physical drives.
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