As others said, Rclone and encrypt your data before sending. I wouldn't trust no matter what the cloud provider says.
Data Hoarder
We are digital librarians. Among us are represented the various reasons to keep data -- legal requirements, competitive requirements, uncertainty of permanence of cloud services, distaste for transmitting your data externally (e.g. government or corporate espionage), cultural and familial archivists, internet collapse preppers, and people who do it themselves so they're sure it's done right. Everyone has their reasons for curating the data they have decided to keep (either forever or For A Damn Long Time (tm) ). Along the way we have sought out like-minded individuals to exchange strategies, war stories, and cautionary tales of failures.
End-to-end encrypted cloud storage providers like Proton Drive can't access your data as it's encrypted and decrypted locally on your devices and only you know the encryption keys. That way, the provider isn't able to look at your data.
three words, Zero Knowledge Encryption, look for Clouds that have this technology, so that only you can really see what they are, not even the company can
but in any case, DO NOT SHARE YOUR FILES PUBLICLY, especially if they are Copyrited, Mega is the one I trust the most or you could invest in NAS or DAS
So I don't think you'll find a cloud provider- especially an established, reputable one, that doesn't have a terms of service that includes do not upload illegal material.
So the thing is, even if their is a site that doesn't police user uploads today- that might change at any time in the future. Even if they claim to encrypt your data, if it's not done on your end, they can unencrypt it.
Your best bet is encrypt it before you upload- that's a hassle , or just self host it.
Encrypt your documents before uploading so that they are unable to read them if worried.
Every cloud service polices or regulates in some way. They have to. If they didn't, they would be filled with nasty illegal shit and the police would be at their door.
Short answer: No.
Long answer: AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA no.
Encrypt your data on your end before a cloud client even looks in its general direction.
cloud storage service with client side encryption.
Encryption is the solution. A combination of at rest and on the fly encryption. They could still pull keys from ram, and they can also monitor your system over time. This all depends on your threat model. If you just want to upload your media collection and run a plex server. Just encrypt things. If you are running a drug market place... the fact that you asked this question... not only the fact that you had to ask it, but the very fact you asked it... well give up that dream. You will be caught very quickly.
What do you all think about MEGA.IO? Supposedly that’s client side encrypted at least against common hackers. I also don’t want my financial data hacked by next year’s script hax0rs, but if I make a 2MB change to a file within a 100GB Veracrypt file I’d like to not upload the entire 100GB every time. Is Mega trustworthy?
Mega is trustworthy. You can see the client code on git, and you can check the code in the browser if you like. It's encrypted in the browser then sent to the server encrypted and without sending the password.
You can verify it yourself, but if they were lying then some security researcher would have already made their career by finding and publicising the lie.
Hello FBI , WE GOT HIM
get a seedbox
you mean a cloud storage that doesn’t care you stole a movie and uploaded on the internet for free?
Encrypt the files before uploading and no service will be able to spy on you.
I think iCloud has E2E encryption so they can’t police it even if they want to? Maybe check first.
Most of them won't really do anything about what you upload unless somebody specifically reports it. I would still recommend encrypting anything important like legal documents or whatever but if you're worried they're going to get at you for a pirated movie or something like that I promise you they aren't, unless you're sharing that around with a bunch of people
I can confirm that at least both Dropbox and Google drive will not throw a fit about that kind of material as long as nobody reports it
And if you're really paranoid just throw them in a password-protected raw file and set it to encrypt the file names as well and then they pretty much can't do anything about it
Encryption is key for securing your data. Utilize tools such as VeraCrypt and Cryptomator for robust file encryption prior to uploading them to cloud storage. Alternatively, consider using virtual tapes, as implemented by Starwind VTL. In this caseour data remains unaccessible to cloud providers.
Encrypt your data with a key only you know