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Every Cloud...(Part 3) - Sharing/Team Features

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Sharing/Team Features

Sending large files directly to the inboxes of friends and colleagues can often irritate them - assuming it's possible at all, given the size restrictions available on most email services. With ISP-provided FTP space a distant memory, and file-hosting sites like MediaFire and RapidShare an ad-infested mess, cloud storage may actually be the best way to share a file with a friend.

Description: Free Ftp Space

Free Ftp Space

There are two types of sharing: public, which creates a download link allowing anyone to download a copy of the file in question, and private, which makes a file or folder available to be viewed, copied, edited or even deleted by a trusted friend, who shares access with you. The former is good for sending files to people, while the latter is primarily useful for collaboration. The question is which service lets you do it best?

Description: SugarSync is the only cloud storage service with an Outlook plugin

SugarSync is the only cloud storage service with an Outlook plugin

SugarSync definitely has one of the strongest ranges of sharing feature-sets. In addition to its public sharing, folder collaboration, and password-protection controls, SugarSync is the only cloud storage service with an Outlook plugin, which automatically converts file attachments into downloads hosted on your storage. A great idea, and a shame it's restricted to Outlook users.

Other services come off looking almost lazy by comparison, but Google Drive has the worst time of it. At present, the system mainly relies on the existing Google Docs sharing features (which are less than stellar) and takes the irritating step of merging with and rearranging your Google Docs file system when you sign up, shuffling existing shared documents into a sub-folder without quite explaining the process to you. Many a heart-stopping moment will presumably be induced by this behaviour, as people wonder where their important shared file has suddenly disappeared to and how much trouble they're in if they can't find it.

Worse still, public sharing is only available through the web interface, which means that unlike in, say, Dropbox's desktop client, you can't get a shareable link to a file without firing up your browser, logging in and finding the share link there. It takes at least six or seven steps, which compares incredibly poorly to the likes of Dropbox's two-step 'Right Click > Get Link' process. Google apologists are quick to point out that features such of this will be added before Google Drive is out of beta, but we know from experience that getting a Google product out of beta could take years.

Hard Drivin’?

So, as it turns out, even though Google Drive has the world's most recognisable and beloved web brand behind it, the product itself is a muddled affair, strong in a few areas but excelling in none. Given that the excitement that greeted the appearance of Dropbox has long faded, it's safe to say that Google Drive has a difficult time ahead if it wants to convince people that it's a serious product and not some token entry into the scene. We hope, for Google's sake, that it finds a way.

Description: google drive

Drive Failure

As a fledgling service, there are plenty of areas where Google Drive hasn't quite got things right. Here are two major things you should be aware of if you're planning to hop onto Google's latest bandwagon.

1.    Security

Google Drive doesn't encrypt the files stored on its server, so the only thing between you and someone snooping through your stuff is a password. By comparison, Dropbox, SugarSync, ADrive, Box and many others offer access to encryption and/or secure connections (sometimes only on paid accounts) - although SkyDrive, at least, is in the same boat as Google.

The reasoning is fairly flimsy. If your files were encrypted, it would mean Google's content-scanning advert algorithms wouldn't be able to look at your files and target adverts at you (which, lest we forget, is most of Google's reason for existing). Hardly comforting. It's a bit like your landlord explaining that there's no lock on your door so that salespeople can drop by...

2.    Terms of Service

As is traditional for the launch of any new product from a web giant, the debut of Google Drive was quickly followed up by the discovery that the terms of service asserted unreasonable levels of ownership of any file uploaded to the service.

In all likelihood, the intention is that the ToS is supposed to allow Google merely to apply its services to your files (e.g. copy them between devices, rename them, move them) but, as written, the terms appear to mean that Google could use your source code, publish your novel as its own, and sell your photos without paying you a penny.

There is a clause stating that "you retain ownership of any intellectual property right you hold", but that's directly at odds with the offending segment, which states "When you upload or otherwise submit content to our Services, you give Google a worldwide license to use, host, store, reproduce, modify, create derivative works, communicate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute such content." As it happens, that all seems rather vague, in Google's favour. It's unlikely to change (it's actually all in Google's new unified ToS), so if you want to use it, you're just going to have to trust Google.

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