Googles' gdrive...

jrazz wrote on 3/7/2006, 8:27 PM
I read a thread the other day (I think from Farss) concerning storing a client's media that they needed regular access to. This sounds ideal for something like that but there is always the chance that your files could become stolen, breached, or corrupted, but I guess that is the chance you take.
I wish this service was out now as I would store quiet a few things on it.

Read the story here.

j razz

Comments

Coursedesign wrote on 3/7/2006, 9:37 PM
You could always store up to 2GB of files in your Google gmail area, using a freeware app.
Spot|DSE wrote on 3/8/2006, 6:56 AM
I can't imagine putting anything up there from the perspective of enterprise. Too much at risk for too little protection. Can you imagine losing all of your confidential data to a competitor? Or all of your financial files stolen? Or having your copyrighted data taken from the site that you stored it on, and having someon else use it before you could register it, and their proof could modify the date you stored it, thus obviating the date of storage being proof you created/uploaded it.
For my money, I'm not willing to put anything exclusive on the web, and secure data lives on hard drives not shared to the network anyway. We all know business is competitive, moreover I think access and anonymity tempt folks that don't have reasonable morals or ethics to want to access or attempt to access your media. Why provide unnecessary temptation?
JJKizak wrote on 3/8/2006, 7:26 AM
In these days, how could you even think to trust the security of that data? Even secure sites are being breeched.

JJK
Coursedesign wrote on 3/8/2006, 7:36 AM
It is reasonable to have different levels of security for different levels of data.

I have my company financial data and much IP in development backed up every night to two separate geographic locations via a commercial online service that serves also some the largest companies in the U.S. The data is encrypted with a very long key, and the service company doesn't have the key, so even if somebody broke into their servers, they would get zippo. I still have to protect my company networks, but that protection has been successful for a decade so far. There is always a risk, but I have done the best I can.

That service is not suited for large media files (it's too slow for that), but it's ideal for even a large quantity of smaller files that are updated incrementally, because only the changes are transmitted.

Could there be data I wouldn't trust even to this service? Not for me currently, but if it was state secrets I would of course do something different. And it won't be what the Department of Homeland Security does....

Any web mail access presents some risk for break-ins. If this is unacceptable, don't even have it enabled (it doesn't matter so much whether you use it or not, it's whether it is possible to access it).

The use of a gmail account as an external data drive has been done for a long time, and it would be a separate account with no additional risk if it's used to store a client review file for example.

And don't use hotmail for anything, that has been broken enough times with very very simple means.

jrazz wrote on 3/8/2006, 8:00 AM
I was thinking it would be beneficial for storing raw footage or complete wedding files stored as .iso files that you could make available to your client(s) to download for backup purposes. I see a lot of potential for things like this, but yeah, common-sense would tell you that anything that could undermine your interests should not be stored online.

j razz
RichMacDonald wrote on 3/9/2006, 8:10 AM
>You could always store up to 2GB of files in your Google gmail area, using a freeware app.

10MB per file, max. That's a bit of a hassle for us video guys :-)
jrazz wrote on 3/9/2006, 8:46 AM
There is a way around the 10mb file limit as you would use a third party utility to upload your files.

j razz
RichMacDonald wrote on 3/9/2006, 9:20 AM
>There is a way around the 10mb file limit as you would use a third party utility to upload your files.

I can use winrar to zip the files into 10mb segments, but that is a hassle. I use gmail, which is terrific (until google releases its own tool shortly), but does not solve the 10mb limitation. Are you talking about some other tool?
jrazz wrote on 3/9/2006, 9:30 AM
yeah, there is another tool that will allow you to access your account strictly for storing data. I have not used it but you should be able to google it. Something like "using gmail for storage" should get you some results.
I read about it when gmail was out for a couple of months. It was in a list of things that you could do with gmail and ways to utilize every ounce of the service. I remember a website that I came across that had a ton of scripts etc. for gmail. I used one for a notification icon, but soon after google made there own so I switched.
Sorry I could not be of more help, but I am sure that somebody on here has used it or knows what I am talking about.

j razz