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Forum Discussion
riccardo1981
3 years agoNew member | Level 2
Dropbox acquires Boxcryptor. What will happen to all those files that have been encrypted?
Hi
As most will know, dropbox has purchased boxcryptor. At this point my question is, what will happen to all those files that have been encrypted with boxcryptor ? Should they all be decrypted an...
- 3 years ago
riccardo1981 wrote:
At this point my question is, what will happen to all those files that have been encrypted with boxcryptor ?
Since this is such a new development, such answers are likely not available yet, beyond what has been stated by the Boxcryptor founders (emphasis mine).
What does this mean for our users and customers?
First of all: All our existing users and customers will remain with the German Secomba GmbH with the same shareholders as during the past 10 years. No contracts, customer data or keys will migrate to Dropbox, all data will remain in our German data centers.
While we’ve sold several key technology assets to Dropbox, we will continue to service our existing users and customers pursuant to the terms of their existing contracts. However, as of today, we will not allow the creation of new accounts or purchases of any new licenses.
If you’re an existing customer, you can keep using Boxcryptor as you do today, and we’ll be in touch with more details as we join forces with Dropbox. If you’re new here and would like to stay up to date on Dropbox’s progress, join the Dropbox mailing list.
You will also find the most important FAQs regarding the next steps below.
riccardo1981
3 years agoNew member | Level 2
I found the answer
https://www.boxcryptor.com/it/blog/post/boxcryptor-and-dropbox-user-info/
yes i need to decrypt all files before my license expire ..what a mess
romualpiecyk
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
I just spent the last week decrypting all of my files. Very disappointing that this is their guidance. Us loyal customers are left in the cold with unencrypted docs in the public cloud, while they ride off into the sunset with their billions. At the end of the day, they never cared about privacy and protection - only developing a platform for an eventual sale.
I'm thinking of moving to Apple iCloud for my file storage, as their new "Advanced Data Protection" seems to offer similar protection whereby Apple doesn't own the encryption keys - we do. See here for more info:
- Martin R.193 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
forget about Apple iCloud Drive if you own larger data amounts. Pain in the a** I just tried to migrate 50GB data but it killed Finder already during upload. iCloud still has a lot of bugs and is simply not reliable enough. If you are a spoiled Dropbox+Boxcryptor user, nothing will ever compete to and beat this couple. I tried everything and I'm ready for any discussion and will provide cons for all alternatives. And the new end-to-end encryption for iCloud sounds nice but who tells you that it really works reliably and that you can trust? I will always encrypt very sensitive data myself anyway before uploading them to any server/cloud.
Download your key from the Boxcryptor account and then you are safe to decrypt your data with the BC-App on your Mac even if Boxcryptor shuts down their service (this works offline). No need to decrypt all in panic now. In the best possible case Dropbox will implement the Boxcryptor technology to Dropbox so that the encrypted files can be still used later without the need to decrypt them first and re-encrypt them with Dropbox then...waiting desparately for news from Dropbox what their plans are and if Boxcryptor will be still available for other clouds such as Google Drive.... - Curmudgeon3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Sync is a better solution than Apple or MSFT. Sync uses full encryption natively and does not store the keys themselves. They don't have the ability to encrypt the file names, but they have no access to your files or data. For the past several months, I've been migrating nearly 60TB from Dropbox to Sync, and other than the sheer magnitude of the volume, it's gone without any problems. Sync is much less expensive for a business account as well, with a minimum of only 2 users and it's US$200 per user per year for unlimited storage.
- Martin R.193 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
The only reason why I moved my 800GB media data to OneDrive instead to Sync, was the fact, that it is not supported by cloud transfer services such as MultCloud or RiceDrive. For my media data I don't need zero-knowledge encryption. For sensitive data I now use Filen which offers zero-knowledge encryption as a standard.
- Anton D.2 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Right. Move out of Dropbox. It is really expensive, they are unclear about zero-knowledge implementation. Contempt for their users will get back at them.
- Tomachi2 years agoNew member | Level 2I've not been able to recover my files reticent to use and lay for Dropbox account if I am unsure if the investment will pay off
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