Who do you trust?

Who do you trust?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nextcloud
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none of them, run your own shit

all of them, they are all nice respectable companies

All of them. I know they have my interests at heart, and the government protects me from them spying on me.

For work, any of them will do. Some stuff goes only on personal cloud.

>save a photo
>manually transfer it to my laptop and desktop and sort it each time
>download a song
>place it in the music folder on my laptop, phone and desktop
>wasting this much time because "muh scary cloud"

Download, save or take any photo or song on a cloud enabled device, it syncs instantly. It just works

cryptomator

>tfw mesh is dead

never trust someone else's computer
create your owncloud

In order:
1. iCloud
2. Dropox
3. Onedrive
4. G Drive

my own, pleb.

fpbp

No one.
Use any of them, but encrypt the data.

I use Gdrive because I am used to Google products and it just werks, but I have any potentially sensible file encrypted.

That way, even if someone get access to my data or if Google betrays me, I don't care.

Google drive. I don't even know what those other ones are.

What about syncthing?

I trust freedom and the GPL

Whom*

The correct answer is none of them

I only trust* mega


*make limitless accounts using throwaway email to host a single file of my weird porn for ochochan

Google

I only store unimportant files on Google Drive. The rest I don't use it all because I already use some Google services, might as well use Drive too. They all pretty much do the same thing anyway. I still wouldn't use any of them for storing important shit, not necessarily because of the botnet but because of potential loss. I don't trust hardware that isn't physically in front of me.

Syncthing

Resilio.

You can thank me later.

just checking this thing out, and i saw this

>For Syncthing to be able to synchronize files with another device, it must be told about that device. This is accomplished by exchanging “device IDs”. A device ID is a unique, cryptographically-secure identifier that is generated as part of the key generation the first time you start Syncthing. It is printed in the log above, and you can see it in the web GUI by selecting the “gear menu” (top right) and “Show ID”.

>Two devices will only connect and talk to each other if they are both configured with each other’s device ID. Since the configuration must be mutual for a connection to happen, device IDs don’t need to be kept secret. They are essentially part of the public key.

So I have a question.
If I just randomly generate a billion of these ID's then I can effectively connect to every running instance of syncthing that exists, right?

...

>billion
Assuming the device ID is a string of alphanumeric characters, giving about 36 "digits" to use (that's assuming case-insensitivity), you could generate 1 trillion random IDs, and still not make a single collision.
On top of that, there's the whole "must be mutual" bit.

None, you twat

>trillion random IDs, and still not make a single collision.
yeah, so just run a super computer on that job for a couple of hours and bada bing, there you go your first collision.

run it for a month on a government sponsored black budget and presto open says a me

Except if you make the ID long enough (not even that long), with enough variation, it'd take longer than we think the universe has existed to go through all of them, even at the theoretical thermodynamic limit of computation.

Not that it matters; given Syncthing's system, even if you have the device ID, they have to approve sharing with you.

Free software, and even then I like to avoid systemd.

Siacoin

nextcloud, syncthing, rsync

You don't need to sell your freedom for convenience.

How would one do this securely?

What hardware, server os, and what encryption/other applications are best for consumers

nextcloud, ubuntu server, some old shitty pc of yours with plenty of hdd space. All you need.

That's it?
How does it transmit data?

Sync software running automatically in the background

> autistic rich bois

nobody can do that without wasting money.
if you are not a moron doing illegal shit, nobody will ever give a fuck about your fucking files moron.

>That's it?
Yes that's it.
>How does it transmit data?
Nextcloud files are stored in conventional directory structures, and can be accessed via WebDAV if necessary. User files are encrypted during transit and can be encrypted at rest (requires encryption to be turned on). Nextcloud can synchronise with local clients running Windows (Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8), OS X (10.6 or later), or various Linux distributions.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nextcloud

None.
However I still trust those guys more than some of the game houses like Rockstar or Ubisoft.
How some of these companies are not class auctioned for fraud is a mystery to me.

I've done it for free

nobody needs cloud storage in the first place
can't bitch about it being only for rich people when it's still completely a novelty

No one, not even myself

>Which botnet do you trust?
I don't know man, just don't know.

Thanks, so it can be accessed online, not just LAN?

yes, through ssh or make your own webserver.

bull shit. To do what I do - and I don't even use very large files - I would want a very high throughput upload, and I don't even count the electricity costs or the annoyance of having extra hardware being always online or requiring an ISP 24/7 up.

As I said, only rich bois that have no sense of money's value at those scales would find that shit "fee". It's not free, it's fucking annoying and costly on top.

>I would want a very high throughput upload
Just ran a speedtest, would 253Mb/s be sufficient?

You are a moron; it has been extremely valuable to our small offices here. Without dealing with any high cost ISP and dedicated servers we can have our small files on the go or in the office seamlessly and we don't give a fuck about extreme security because it's just regular boring office work.

Thanks for proving my point idiot. The whole argument I started is that only rich bois in rich countries would find that shit "free".

I'd be spending the $10/mo whether or not I was hosting my own "cloud," so yes it is free.

having a home server is cheaper in the long run

me, myself and I

Well I live in student apartment in Finland so electricity, water and 100/100 internet are included in my rent.

20€ per month for 600Mb/s is too expensive?
inb4
>you must be living in rich country
No, east europe shithole

>what is syncthing
>what is owncloud
It's like you're not even trying

Whom's't'd've

Fuck off with you proprietary shit, syncthing is the way to go

>use old pc you have standing around
>cram a bunch of old hdds with raidz in it
>this makes you rich
I bet you buy an iphone to impress people

How are you even posting if you're that poor? Is your country being bombed or some shit? Where are you?

None. I encrypt my data to cloud services on my end.

...

is this bait?

Gdrive, mega and dropbox.
Saving and sync my meme folders with them.
Gdrive was for mainly for school stuff.

none. i only backup non-personal stuff in the cloud.

none
Why do they use box so much idk

I use french Hubic.

MEGA

What are LAN NASes for?

>having more than one system

because google provides free storage because they love giving away free stuff for no profit, amirite

Nobody. But I don't particularly care either.

you cannot trust any of them
if you want to use a cloud service without rolling your own, you must encrypt your files before uploading them

I use dropbox but encrypt files with 7zip with a script before uploading them.

Onedrive because microsoft isn't going out of business anytime soon and don't close their services randomly like google, if i was an applefag i guess i'd use icloud.
>muh botnet
Everything is a fucking botnet the moment it's connected to the internet.

There's only one to be trusted

>pic very related

...

Always go as foreign as you can, it's just common sense.

GDrive

What if my house with my server in it burns down?

You should have an offsite backup.

>What is offsite backup?

Learn how to server, bro

What's the self-hosting solution for an offsite backup? Honest question.

You could start with switching your backupdrive everyday and store the drive in like your basement or a fireproof safe or something

Your grandma's attic.

That's funny because I already live there.

Another server at a friend's or relative's house.

OR
As an offsite backup you can store your encrypted backups in a public cloud

You need to server to use it. It's not as convenient as Drive, Dropbox and others.

You're on Sup Forums

You're on the internet in 2018.

And?

[current year] doesn't make retardation less retarded.

client-side encrypted solution on top of any cloud storage

he's probably usa citizen and has to pay 100+$ for asymetric data capped 5mb connexion

>the (((cloud)))
storage is cheap as shit. archive your own shit.

Any reason to use nextcloud instead of seafile if you host your own?

This.

>wasting money
It cost me literally $0 except for my time, but I enjoyed setting it up anyway so I consider it a win win. I am rich, but I don't think I'm autistic (borderline maybe)

The only thing I upload to any cloud are my presentations. Why the fuck would anyone upload anything else?