Domain: boxcryptor.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to boxcryptor.com.
Comments · 12
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There are plenty of options...
Did you even try searching? Linux support may be hard to find, but OSX and Windows apps seems readily available. I'm sure most of these companies are working on Linux support too. There is no technical reason why this can't work seamlessly. The only disadvantage is using the native web interfaces to search for and view files.
http://www.cloudlock.com/ [looks like this runs from the cloud, so will work anywhere]
https://www.cloudfogger.com/en...
https://www.boxcryptor.com/en
http://www.syncdocs.com/downlo... [windows only] -
Boxcryptor
You might want to take a look at
https://www.boxcryptor.com/en/... -
Re:Wrong question
Good question. I asked something similar in a comment the last time this question was asked, only about a week ago but nobody provided an answer. Maybe we'll get one this time.
My own thought was to use 7-zip to make strongly encrypted 7z files, but somebody can suggest something better. In particular, it would be nice if such a tool could automatically do the uploading/downloading to/from the storage provider, which 7-zip doesn't do.
Something like Boxcryptor, perhaps? Although it only works with consumer grade cloud storage it sounds like what you want. Although it is $48/year on its own (if you want to do fancy stuff like manage multiple cloud accounts or encrypt filenames before storing them) so the costs of the belt to go with the suspenders can add up.
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Re:NSA
EncFS or BoxCryptor are your friend.
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Re:I like the idea
You may want to try Boxcryptor https://www.boxcryptor.com/
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Re:Cloud 0?
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Re:Still missing encryption
I use this and it works really well: https://www.boxcryptor.com/
Works with most cloud storage services, I happen to use it with DropBox.
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Re:Google Drive
I was doing truecrypt but didn't like the extra steps to open a file, dump stuff in, etc. I gave boxcryptor http://www.boxcryptor.com/ a whirl and have been very happy with it. It adds on right to dropbox. It's free (up to 2 gig of encryption) and a one time fee for unlimited. I tried spider oak too but didn't like how it all worked and I'm not a fan of re-occuring costs.
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Re:Yay!
Or BoxCryptor
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Re:TrueCrypt
A better solution for encrypting Dropbox content is using BoxCryptor (Win) + EncFS (Linux + Mac). Those are file-by-file-encryption tools which encrypt each file individually. No network overhead, simultaneous access is still possible and you can use features like file versioning or undeletion.
http://www.boxcryptor.com/ [boxcryptor.com]
http://www.arg0.net/encfs [arg0.net] -
Re:Use Truecrypt
A better solution for encrypting Dropbox content is using BoxCryptor (Win) + EncFS (Linux + Mac). Those are file-by-file-encryption tools which encrypt each file individually. No network overhead and you can still use features like file versioning or undeletion.
http://www.boxcryptor.com
http://www.arg0.net/encfs -
Hosted Alternatives
There are some decent-looking hosted alternatives to dropbox which do client-side encryption. I've looked into this a bit, but I haven't tried any of these yet, so YMMV...
One particularly interesting one is TarSnap. The best part is the client is OSS, so you can verify that encryption is done properly (strong & client-side). You could even reverse the protocol and design your own server software, if you want.
http://www.tarsnap.com/
Another interesting one is SpiderOak. However their client is not OSS, so you have to trust that they're doing the encryption properly
https://spideroak.com/
Here are some other potential hosts, but I'm not sure exactly how proper the encryption is:
http://www.boxcryptor.com/
http://syncplicity.com/products/