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Forum Discussion
ae2rigc
8 years agoNew member | Level 2
Ending support of public folder
Just heard from dropbox that support for the public folder is ending.
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As a result, we’ll soon be ending support for the Public folder. Dropbox Pro users will be able to use the Publ...
- 8 years agoLGM - the issue is that people are abusing it and causing issues for everybody by getting the Dropbox domains blacklisted which cause emails to fail and downloads to be blocked by firewalls etc.
In terms of changing the extension, sorry, no idea how you would do that!
VC
Helpful | Level 6
This is the same issue I have! It is beyond frustrating that Dropbox would do this. The shared files just simply are not the same! Dropbox -- please listen up.
shileyd
8 years agoHelpful | Level 6
I don't want to put countless hours of work into finding and replacing all my links. DROPBOX CANNOT BE TRUSTED
- Deide8 years agoHelpful | Level 5It's also added complexity.
I think the main reasons Dropbox ever became popular were due to these 3 things that created simplicity:
1.) Public Folder - you just managed a file system. With the addition of a desktop application for seamless syncing and context menu URL copying, it was a dead simple and fully integrated way of effectively hosting a part of your file system on the internet for sharing and fun.
2.) Hot-linking - this was the logical addition to the public folder. It meant that if you shared an image, you'd get a link that ended in .png or .jpeg and was directly viewable or embeddable by anyone using well established SIMPLE technologies that people don't even think about anymore.
I think the main reason Dropbox are removing public folders is to phase hot-linking from their application. No longer will you get direct links. Instead, you'll get download buttons and media previews with proprietary comment systems and surrounding UI. Just like the file hosts of old. It's a shame, because this is initially what set Dropbox apart.
3.) HTML hosting - a sort of extension to hot-linking within the public folder. They disabled this one last year, which is a real shame. It allowed people with the knowledge to host small static pages that could be filled with other content in the Dropbox public folder.
For example, instead of being forced to use the Dropbox image gallery you land on when you click on a shared folder, this allowed people to design their own - write text and even embed things from other sites.
These things are going away - the main things that made Dropbox different. Now, if you want to develop your own applications or functionality, you have to use the Dropbox platform instead of the simplistic but powerful features of the past.
If you want to manage your files, you will have to manage both a file-system and a link sharing system that many people already confuse with the Dropbox shared folders; a feature that allows you to sync what things automatically with other people.
More cognitive overhead, less features, less power.- MadDogDJ8 years agoNew member | Level 2I've already discontinued using my pro dropbox, I consider that 100$ just a loss (they announced this just weeks after I signed up).... I have found better accommodations for my particular needs. so for me it all worked out just fine without them, I hope all their customers leave like like rats on a ship. They better not charge me automatically for another year when my pro expires.
- VC8 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Can you divulge where you moved to? Irt might be of interest to others.
- shileyd8 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Dropbox leadership are nothing but corporate cowards. They discontinue a service that has a collassal impact on thousands of loyal customrers, and all they can do is offer a shallow apology that is nothing but insulting.
I just want an explanation WHY? Would that be asking too much, Dropbox? Surely you have a reason. Would it be too difficult to provide an explanation? That is what respectable companies do! I suspect the reason you haven't provided even a shred of explanation is because you simply don't have the guts to admit why you are turning your customers lives upside down!
Like others I will be moving on, and my greatest wish is that so many others will do the same that your corporation is turned on it's head like you have done to your customers.
- Chris R.8 years agoCollaborator | Level 10It now seems that Dropbox aren't ONLY going to end support for the Public Folder (probably for the reasons suggested above) but also they REFUSE TO TELL US WHY THEY WON'T PRESERVE THE EXISTING LINKS, when it would be so easy to do so.
That's their real cowardice - happy enough to kill parts of the Internet but refusing to tell anyone (not even their brown-tongued "super-users" here) WHY.- Chris R.8 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
There's a lot of users reading this topic. Ok, here's what I suggest everyone does for starters.
1. Load up to near your full Dropbox allowance with any old rubbish (cache files for example). That will make their servers work overtime.
2. Next day - or when you have 5 minutes to spare - delete those rubbish files and replace them with more but different rubbish. Then they will have to sync them all over again. (Meantime, as you need space for genuine data, you can always delete enough rubbish to fit your 'good' data into your allowance).
End result? The Dropbox servers will be working and working, sync'ing rubbish. But as it's your genuine allowance you're filling up, what can they do about it? You're doing exactly what Dropbox was set up to do, only you're making them do it with endless rubbish.
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