Is dropbox botnet? what cloud file storage do you use, Sup Forums?

is dropbox botnet? what cloud file storage do you use, Sup Forums?

Other urls found in this thread:

reddit.com/r/theydidthemath/comments/1x50xl/time_and_energy_required_to_bruteforce_a_aes256/
drop-dropbox.com/
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Once you start using the service, they practically own your files, and can do whatever they want with them. Go and make your assumptions.
I personally use my own, self-hosted service.

>is dropbox botnet?
Yeah, "deleted" files mysteriously reappeared for some people some time ago, meaning they keep your shit without your consent.

>what cloud file storage do you use, Sup Forums?
None.

kek nerd

just use dropbox or google drive

dont use icloud because Sup Forums is gonna hack you

Or... you can use any botnet cloud storage but encrypt your data.

I use a self hosted Nextcloud instance, but if I didn't have that option I'd look into either google drive or onedrive with encrypted files.

Keep in mind that most of the spying they do on you is for knowing how often a user opens .docx files vs .pdf, at what time of the day users interact most often with .mp4 files and so on, i.e. metadata. Encrypting individual files doesn't help against that.

Encryption can still technically be bruteforced. I'd rather not give them that data, when they'd have all the time in the world to try and crack it.
Is there even a way to easily encrypt something on the fly with a cloud service like that? I can only think of things that would manually require action, which would be a hassle.

>use a self hosted Nextcloud instance
how does one setup something like this?

nextcloud

you install it, create a user and then go to the web interface to complete the setup.
I would also reccomend to get a domain and setup letsencrypt so you have a valid cert, this makes it a lot less painful when you connect phones and your desktop.

MEGA and self hosted ownCloud. I plan to fully migrate to ownCloud this year.

thanks, user. i'll look into this. do you need to have a dedicated server pc for this? i currently only have a laptop and a smartphone with me

Look for a VPS provider. I use digital ocean

The only files i need to have access to on different computers are textfiles, so i just use private github repos, which i get for free since i'm a student.

>Thinking properly encrypted files can be brute forced within the lifespan of the universe

Not gonna make it

I had 2gb file deleted two years ago. recently I've wanted to re-upload it, and it was synced in seconds (despite my upload speed being 1mbps). I don't think they ever delete files.

reddit.com/r/theydidthemath/comments/1x50xl/time_and_energy_required_to_bruteforce_a_aes256/
Haha, guess I'm retarded and you're right. Except if quantum computers become a thing or something, but that's a whole different issue.

Nextcloud is a client server setup.
You setup a server that holds the latest version of your files.
Then you install a client which talks to the server.
When you transfer a file from your phone to your laptop, you transfer it through the client on the phone to the server to the client on the laptop.
So you need your server to be turned on whenever your clients needs to transfer files, I recomend to have one turned on at all times with a fixed domain, it doesn't have to be a huge setup, you can get by with a raspberry pi or do as and use a VPS like digital ocean.
Digital ocean is very good to toy with if you want to test it and see if it is something you want to do.
They offer a $5 starting capital when you sign (so one month free with the cheapest option) and you can pay hourly (20 days = 1 month) so if you want to test it out for a few hours at the time over a longer period, you can stretch it out for a while.
The "problem" with digital ocean is you don't get a ton of space and it is a lot cheaper to setup a computer in your own home that does this if you only need a simple server.
If you need a ton of servers and you want to instantly start and stop servers, digital ocean is the way to go, no doubt. I use it all the time and it is really good.

drop-dropbox.com/
literal botnet and backdoor for NSA

Any particular differences beside UI between this two? Any security/performance issues?

setting up something like nextcloud is so easy even you could probably do it

A quick google showed me that nextcloud is basically owncloud, but open source.

Between what?
Owncloud and nextcloud?
Nextcloud is a newer fork of owncloud.
It is libreoffice vs OpenOffice.

Set up your own file server and access files through SolidExplorer (on mobile devices)

You're probaly referring to this issue

AFAIK both are.
Thanks user.

what about mega?

>what cloud file storage do you use, Sup Forums?
Mine

...

MEGA because I don't give a fuck