this post was submitted on 21 Feb 2022
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There are a handful of cloud services available for Linux users that provide native applications. Dropbox is one of the oldest and most popular. Then there is Mega and pCloud. Google has shamelessly decided to not create a Google Drive client for Linux. You may also self-host Nextcloud or Seafile, but that’s not everyone’s cup of tea.

Internxt is based out of Spain. Like several other EU-based companies, encryption and privacy are at its core. With Internxt Drive, they focus on user-friendly encrypted storage with military-grade encryption and file sharding, so only you have control over your files and data. Internxt uses your password to encrypt and decrypt your files. That means they do not know your password, and if you forget it, your files will be gone (the way security should be).

There are desktop clients for all three major OSes, as well as a web based client, and a client for iOS. I don't see an Android client. Each user gets a free 10GB forever, and 20GB is €10.68 annually, or 200GB for €41.88 annually. They also have monthly plans, and very interestingly, also lifetime plans. I'm currently using SpiderOak, which has a Linux client too, and it is costs US$14 pm for 2TB (Internxt €9.99 or $11.34 monthly).

One downside many will notice though, is the desktop client appears to be Electron based, which is never ideal from a resource perspective.

See https://itsfoss.com/internxt-cloud-service/

#technology #backup #cloudstorage #opensource #internxt

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[–] dashbuck@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (2 children)

That's interesting. The post was missing a direct link. :) https://internxt.com/

Might use it with rclone someday, so that many other free services can be used. Good to see many new E2EE cloud storage services coming up.

[–] danie10@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Apparently https://filen.io/ is also worth checking out I'm told.

[–] danie10@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago

Well missing on purpose. I like to credit the source where I found news or a story....