We recently angekündigt our plans to bring an online, secure, personal storage service to Giganews members. Today, we are opening up registration for early access to Dump Truck online storage by Golden Frog. There are a limited number of spots available to try Dump Truck, so please register today.
Was ist ein Muldenkipper?
Dump Truck is a personal online storage service created by Golden Frog and will be available for Giganews customers in the coming months. Dump Truck allows you to move your bits and bytes massively and freely while ensuring your files are secure.
Dump Truck early features include:
- Intuitive Webschnittstelle mit Drag-and-Drop-Upload
- Einfache und sichere Dateistruktur
- 256-Bit-SSL-Verschlüsselung für Uploads und Downloads
- Die Dateien werden auf der Festplatte mit einer 256-Bit-AES-Verschlüsselung verschlüsselt.
- Zugriff auf Ihre Dateien überall auf der Welt
Visit the Dump Truck registration page for the opportunity to be the first to try the service! There are a limited number of spots, so signup today!
Don’t forget to Subscribe to our blog and follow us on Facebook and Twitter to receive the latest updates about early access to Dump Truck.
Anonym sagt
Looking forward to taking this for a spin! Any chance of early access?
🙂
Liam says
Look forward to this, especially if you can guarantee more privacy than Drpbx seems to be offering lately
Anonym sagt
Looks great! Are you planning a on including an email service in Dump Truck? As I trust you more than Microsoft, Google or Apple.
Anonym sagt
Will there be SFTP support for uploading and downloading the files?
Fred says
With Dump Truck, are files encrypted on the user's PC *before* upload using private key, or encrypted on the server after upload? In other words, can uploaded files be decrypted by Golden Frog — or possibly byhackers, e.g. Dropbox's recent security hole?
Lachlan Hunt says
Will there be a storage limit, either a hard quota or some sort of implied reasonable usage limit? Would it be acceptable to store a few TB of data?
You say there will be 256 bit AES disk encryption. When accessing the files, will decryption be done on the server side, requiring that you maintain the encryption keys, or will all decryption be done locally, meaning that I may maintain my own decryption keys securely?
Will it require any special software to access the service? Will I be able to mount it as a remote drive, either on Windows, Mac or Linux, and/or will it be possible to browse the files using via a web interface using a web browser?
Anonym sagt
Would would make this invaluable is if my downloads from Giganews could go directly to the Dumb Truck for storage and later access. Thereby taking a huge load off of my Comcast bandwidth cap.
KiNG says
First word: LINUX
I don't care otherwise.
I'm a Diamond, and will be for the rest of my life, but lack of LINUX support is killing me.
You're getting your money either way, but can guarantee my lifetime membership if you provide all of your tools with LINUX support.
O_o
Anonym sagt
This sounds fantastic, but the wording of your bullet points about encryption has me a bit concerned… You call out encryption of data in transit and encryption of data at rest, but what about between upload and disk or disk and download? Who owns and stores the encryption keys?
Ideally, the data is encrypted and decrypted on my client machine/device and the keys are never exposed to Golden From or Giganews.
Not that I don't trust you guys, but… I don't trust anyone.
Anders Buch says
I hope you consider the following use case: A Windows based desktop with access to a number of mapped network drives; these synchronized into the cloud; and then synchronized back onto a “stand alone” MacOSX based MacBook Pro, making all selected folders from the mapped network drives available locally anywhere. Possible?
Thanks.
– Anders