NobleSavage
Veteran Member
Every "cloud" provider is trying to get their hooks into my data. The ones that have bugged me enough to get on my radar: iCloud, Google Drive, Office 365, Dropbox, Firefox, Ubuntu One, and probably a few others.
The only one I use is Google Drive mostly because my company uses it for sharing files, video conferencing with Hangouts, and scanning in receipts while on the road.
My girlfriend has a Chrome Book. We were using Hangouts and I snapped a few non-sexual pictures of her. When we ended chat I looked for the pictures on my computer - no where to be found. I searched Google Drive (I have a personal account and a business account) and they were not there. I gave up. 3 days later I found the pictures on my cell phone. I'm sure if I investigate for 15 minutes I'll figure out what happened, but I really hate that it happened. I was expecting pictures to be stored on my HD and they ended up on my phone. Who knows what kind of permissions were set. From my experience these services always like more sharing and they update their rules often.
I'm thinking about setting up http://owncloud.org/ just for piece of mind. If anyone else is interested in experimenting with this let me know, we can compare notes. I'm using DigitalOcean.com for hosting. I wouldn't call them mission critical, but they are a great place for development. They have a good community of tinkerers.
The only one I use is Google Drive mostly because my company uses it for sharing files, video conferencing with Hangouts, and scanning in receipts while on the road.
My girlfriend has a Chrome Book. We were using Hangouts and I snapped a few non-sexual pictures of her. When we ended chat I looked for the pictures on my computer - no where to be found. I searched Google Drive (I have a personal account and a business account) and they were not there. I gave up. 3 days later I found the pictures on my cell phone. I'm sure if I investigate for 15 minutes I'll figure out what happened, but I really hate that it happened. I was expecting pictures to be stored on my HD and they ended up on my phone. Who knows what kind of permissions were set. From my experience these services always like more sharing and they update their rules often.
I'm thinking about setting up http://owncloud.org/ just for piece of mind. If anyone else is interested in experimenting with this let me know, we can compare notes. I'm using DigitalOcean.com for hosting. I wouldn't call them mission critical, but they are a great place for development. They have a good community of tinkerers.