← Back to context Comment by redox99 4 months ago Uploading your encryption keys is not just "any sort of feature". 3 comments redox99 Reply gruez 4 months ago You're right, it's less intrusive than uploading your files directly, like a backup does. lazide 4 months ago I’m still pissed about the third+ time one drive ‘helpfully’ backed up all my files after I disabled it.So that may not be a great example of you’re trying to make people like Microsoft. JoshTriplett 4 months ago On the contrary: a backup can be fully encrypted by a key under the user's control that isn't available to the storage provider.
gruez 4 months ago You're right, it's less intrusive than uploading your files directly, like a backup does. lazide 4 months ago I’m still pissed about the third+ time one drive ‘helpfully’ backed up all my files after I disabled it.So that may not be a great example of you’re trying to make people like Microsoft. JoshTriplett 4 months ago On the contrary: a backup can be fully encrypted by a key under the user's control that isn't available to the storage provider.
lazide 4 months ago I’m still pissed about the third+ time one drive ‘helpfully’ backed up all my files after I disabled it.So that may not be a great example of you’re trying to make people like Microsoft.
JoshTriplett 4 months ago On the contrary: a backup can be fully encrypted by a key under the user's control that isn't available to the storage provider.
You're right, it's less intrusive than uploading your files directly, like a backup does.
I’m still pissed about the third+ time one drive ‘helpfully’ backed up all my files after I disabled it.
So that may not be a great example of you’re trying to make people like Microsoft.
On the contrary: a backup can be fully encrypted by a key under the user's control that isn't available to the storage provider.