Dropbox Wants To Replace Your Hard Disk
Barence writes "Dropbox has kicked off its first developer conference with the stated goal of replacing the hard disk. 'We are replacing the hard drive,' said Dropbox CEO Drew Houston. 'I don't mean that you're going to unscrew your MacBook and find a Dropbox inside, but the spiritual successor to the hard drive is what we're launching.' The new Dropbox Platform includes tools for developers that will allow them to use Dropbox to sync app data between devices. The company's new APIs will also make it easier for app developers to include plugins that save to Dropbox, or choose files stored in the service for use within apps."
Dropbox doesn't have encryption built-in, and this seems like a truly obvious feature. It's always been a mystery to me why they haven't implemented it. Their info page reads: "Dropbox employees are prohibited from viewing the content of files you store in your account".
This has been especially curious since the last year or two, when everyone's been complaining about how your data isn't safe in the cloud. Even the launch of Mega hasn't prodded them to add security in order to stay competitive.
Anyone know why they don't have an option to secure your data using encryption? Why we have to trust their employees not to peek at our stuff?
(Yes, I know there are 3rd party apps that add this.)
It sounds like Dropbox are spruiking for more VC funding by cobbling together more buzzwords.
Anyone with half a clue will steer clear of any cloud file storage.
spruik: (transitive, Australia) To promote a thing or idea to another person.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
It's already in the corporate environment and causing amusing fuckups as a consequence. It seems just built for situations where client A and client B are competitors and the idiot using dropbox in the middle lets them see each other's stuff by mistake.
About 56 million. It is the third most visited country in the world.
Ok, my home PC is actually running PATA/133, but it's still a lot faster than my DSL connection.
And yes, your 3TB drive may fail over the next five years, but you can buy two of them and do mirroring or incrementals.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks