One thing you should realize about Dropbox is that it is insecure. All encryption-decryption happens on the servers and Dropbox people can decrypt it and see it in plain text. That means that the NSA can also see it. If you want secure file sync, you need to work with a service that does end-to-end encryption/decryption, i.e., the encryption and decryption happens on your local clients file sync apps. I use Tresorit. <https://tresorit.com/>. Prices and feature summary is here. <https://tresorit.com/pricing>. If you ask, they will turn off file versioning, which gives you a lot more file storage space to work with. I don't need versioning, so I did that. Tresorit Business costs $120 per year for 10 users and 1 Terabyte storage but is well worth the money. There is a 14-day free trial. Tresorit has the additional advantage of the company and its servers being located in Switzerland. That nation is in the process of joining the E.U. and is far enough along in the process that E.U. data privacy laws apply, but the laws creating exceptions to those privacy laws do not yet apply. There is a review of 10 different secure file sync services here. <https://www.cloudwards.net/top-10-secure-dropbox-alternatives/>. The page includes a link to listen to the article. I would recommend that you shy away from services that are new. I used two different secure file sync services before arriving at Tresorit. Both companies went out of business. There are a lot of business start-ups in File Sync Land and most do not survive. Tresorit and SpiderOak look like survivors. The rest I am less confident in. I would also recommend against any file sync service whose client side programs are written in Java and use a virtual file system for storage of files on the local machines. Yes, it is more secure, but you won't be able to access any of your files when you do not have a live internet connection for log-in. So if offline access is important to you, be sure to get a service that keeps files in a file system directory rather than in a virtual machine. You can achieve equivalent file security by encrypting your home directory so no one can access your files unless they have your password but you can still have access to your files when not connected to the Internet. Best regards, Paul -- [Notice not included in the above original message: The U.S. National Security Agency neither confirms nor denies that it intercepted this message.] _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list