I’ve been wanting to move away from Dropbox for a long while, but I haven’t been able to find a suitable replacement. Dropbox has always been super convenient and has just worked for me.

I’ve tried Tresoit but the low link sharing limits (2gb) and 10gb limit for files is somewhat of a deal breaker for me. I’ve been interested in Proton Drive for a while, but until their mac app is ready it’s unusable for me.

I’ve also tried self-hosting a nextcloud instance (multiple times) but I’ve always just had too many issues with it. It’s been inconsistent in actually backing up files from my mac, I’ve had so many file conflicts, etc. I have a truenas scale server, so if there are other self-hosted methods I should try let me know.

Currently, I’m looking at filen and sync.com, but I’ve heard both have their issues so I’m curious to hear everyones thoughts on them as well.

Thanks!

  • bobbytables@feddit.de
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    9 months ago

    Nextcloud with Hetzner your-storageshare. ~5€/m for 1TB is hard to beat and it runs so well. I still use encryption and a few plugins like on a selfhosted instance.

    • goodhunter@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      This is a great option, I have used it too in the past. Since, I have switched to iCloud when they implemented e2e encryption. Seems no one else here goes that route, trust issues maybe.

      I do miss versioning with iCloud.

      I have proton drive too, waiting on that osx client.

      • bobbytables@feddit.de
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        9 months ago

        ICloud with e2e could be nice. But having a mix of Linux and Windows laptops in the household it is just not possible. There simply is no Linux client for it. And last time I checked the Windows client didn’t support e2e. So there goes that.

        And to be completely honest I really do have trust issues with Apple (and Big Tech in general).

  • voxel@sopuli.xyz
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    9 months ago

    google drive.
    i pretty much sold my soul to google at this point
    anyway they have my address, payment info, all of my photos since 2014, my preferences from YouTube, google maps data and since I’m using google location sharing and find my phone, they have access to my exact location at all times; and half of my payments go through google pay and I’m using android with my google account.

  • Fermiverse@feddit.de
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    9 months ago

    Syncthing to my selfhosted proxmox server at home then rclone encrypted and unencrypted depending on content, to my cloud storage. Fully automtatic meanwhile.

    Rclone syncs to various cloud services so the provider doesn’t matter from a technical point of view.

  • dmtalon@infosec.pub
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    9 months ago

    Nextcloud docker on unRAID has worked well for me on…

    Android, Windows and my MacBook(s)

    I use it to Auto upload photos from my phone as well as cloud storage. Shared directories with my wife and son for easy sharing.

    No real issues outside a couple painful upgrades in the past .

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I just pay Google $99/yr. for 2TB of storage. I have my Google Drive mapped as G: and Windows libraries mapped to folders in the Google Drive.

    Super simple and cheap. I still have local backups for fast restores, and Google for cloud.

  • Vexz@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    I use a Synology NAS which I can access from everywhere as long as I have internet connection.

    • LUHG@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Yeh this is probably the quickest, simplistic and most robust way. Not the cheapest but unless you have unraid ready and know exactly what to do you’d be hard pushed to find a better solution.

      I use unraid, nextcloud, Immich, Tailscale and so on . It’s not set and forget.

  • Evotech@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Google

    With cryptomator

    It’s super cheap, and with cryptomator you can easily locally encrypt anything you put on there. With great iOS and Android support aswell

    • smeg@feddit.uk
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      9 months ago

      I’ll second Cryptomator, it’s relatively convenient and means I can use the free tiers of Google Drive, Dropbox, Onedrive, etc without them having a nose through all my stuff

  • ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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    9 months ago

    I run Dropbox, since they’re only in cloud storage they can’t really run around and sell data, if found out there would be no reason to stay for their customers. Unlike say Google and Microsoft.

  • I have started trialling mega. 20GB free.

    So far so good.

    One minor annoyance I have had is keepass .kdb files. You can’t just open from mega android, make changes and have it auto save back to the cloud. Have to save out, edit then share back in. There is a autosync app by a third party which I have not tried.

      • Extras@lemmy.today
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        9 months ago

        Iirc theyre these expensive discs that are highly resistant to disc rot (or something along those lines) for at least 1000 years. Kinda gimmicky tbh since it still needs to be stored properly to achieve that claim and suffers from the same problems as any other optical disc (the equipment needed to read and write and still durability)

  • railsdev@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    Storj, specifically using RClone and the native Uplink CLI (vs the S3 gateway). Super cheap, P2P, built-in client-side encryption are what keep me on it (and steering clear of the nightmare that is AWS).