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Forum Discussion
sfsdfd
2 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Opting out of cloud storage?
I've been a Dropbox user for about 10 years. Today, I was greeted with a demand from my Dropbox client to move all of my Dropbox synced folders from ~/Dropbox to ~/Library/CloudStorage. I've done...
- 2 years ago
Hey sfsdfd, thanks for taking the time to provide additional info on your query.
Allow me to clarify that even if you update your Dropbox application to Dropbox for macOS on File Provider, you'll still have the option to have your files available offline.
Even if you don't make the choice to initially sync them as available offline, you can still manually do so afterwards, with a simple right-click choice.
The usability of the app remains the same, with the added option to switch your files to online-only, to save up hard drive space.
However, we do appreciate your feedback on this and I'll make sure to pass it along to our team.
Let us know if you have any other questions.
sfsdfd
Helpful | Level 6
Sure. The option looks like this:
Selecting "Make Files Local" apparently forces Dropbox to use its classic behavior: all folders selected in Selective Sync are stored locally, as well as in the cloud. Select "Make Files Online-Only" prompts the new (toxic) behavior where Dropbox decides which files to store locally and which to store only on Dropbox, where the user has the option of specifying the behavior on a per-file basis.
Apparently, the "Make Files Online-Only" behavior is part of a configuration called "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider," which is available only for accounts with Dropbox Plus.
A few additional notes:
1) The above dialog is only shown during the initial setup process while "linking" your local Dropbox client to your Dropbox account. You can't get to this dialog through Dropbox Preferences or any other way.
2) Even if you select "Make Files Local," Dropbox still tries to persuade you to switch to "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" with the "Make Files Online-Only" option. See the bottom option in the Sync section of Preferences:
And if you select "Get Started," you get this:
If you proceed with this option, you're converted to "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" with the "Make Files Online-Only" behavior. I don't know if that option has a corresponding "Sync" option that allows you to switch back to "Make Files Local," but I expect not - this feels like a classic service "upsell" feature, and one that Dropbox probably doesn't want to make it easy to revert.
3) If you really want to see the above dialog again, the way to do it is to force Dropbox to re-"link" the client to your Dropbox account. The way to do that is to close Dropbox and delete your Dropbox folder. When you restart Dropbox, you instead see this dialog:
Clicking "Relink" causes the Dropbox client to request your credentials and login again, and then shows the top dialog with the "Make Files Local" and "Make Files Online-Only" options.
If all of this sounds janky, well... yes... yes it is. None of this information is documented anywhere that I can find, and it leaves a bunch of unanswered questions, such as those I mentioned in earlier posts.
It looks to me like the Dropbox team wants to strong-arm its user base into the "Online-Only" option, which (1) requires Dropbox Plus (i.e., upselling) and (2) makes it more difficult for users to part ways with Dropbox, since at least some of their files don't live on their own devices (i.e., lock-in). This kind of behavior absolutely does not promote trust - the kind of trust that I'd need to share all of my data with Dropbox and count on it being kept safe, secure, and (most of all) available where I need it, when I need it. It's really unfortunate that Dropbox is making these choices at the expense of its user base.
Hannah
2 years agoDropbox Staff
Hey sfsdfd, thanks for taking the time to provide additional info on your query.
Allow me to clarify that even if you update your Dropbox application to Dropbox for macOS on File Provider, you'll still have the option to have your files available offline.
Even if you don't make the choice to initially sync them as available offline, you can still manually do so afterwards, with a simple right-click choice.
The usability of the app remains the same, with the added option to switch your files to online-only, to save up hard drive space.
However, we do appreciate your feedback on this and I'll make sure to pass it along to our team.
Let us know if you have any other questions.
- sfsdfd12 months agoHelpful | Level 6
Hannah:
I appreciate the response, but you still do not understand.
As per your message:
Hannah wrote:Allow me to clarify that even if you update your Dropbox application to Dropbox for macOS on File Provider, you'll still have the option to have your files available offline.
Even if you don't make the choice to initially sync them as available offline, you can still manually do so afterwards, with a simple right-click choice.
I absolutely do not care about what options I have to alter the behavior of Dropbox for any particular file or folder. Not one bit. Please stop responding about how Dropbox can allow us to specify how individual files or folders are handled.
The sole purpose of my post - and complaint - is about our ability to control what Dropbox does for every file and folder BY DEFAULT. It is not about what options Dropbox gives us for modifying THE DEFAULT BEHAVIOR FOR ALL FILES AND FOLDERS. Because that specific thing, THE DEFAULT BEHAVIOR FOR ALL FILES AND FOLDERS, is the only feature that concerns me.
I would never specify that any file or folder is "online-only." Never ever. Not even once. Please stop informing me of my option to use this feature.
Instead, I would only and exclusively use the Selective Sync feature. For each and every folder that I selected for Selective Sync for a particular device, I want THE ENTIRETY OF THAT FOLDER to exist the device at all times. Zero exceptions. No "some of these files are online-only."
There would never be a time when I select some files in such a folder as "online-only." And there would never be a time when I deliberately specify some files as being "locally stored" in a folder that is otherwise "online-only." Because I would never select the "online-only" version for any folder. Not in any case. Ever.
I hope that I have made this abundantly clear, but in case there is any room for doubt, I will state it one last time:
I WOULD NEVER USE THE "ONLINE-ONLY" FEATURE FOR ANY FILE OR FOLDER, DEVICE, OR CIRCUMSTANCE.
- spiralos10 months agoHelpful | Level 5All my data has gone. Dropbox has taken it and put it in the cloud. Like others here GIVE ME MY DATA BACK LOCALLY AND NOW.
- sally Jane n.11 months agoNew member | Level 2
Agreeing with frustrated responses above and likewise disagreeing with the strong-arming default "Dropbox-goes-Cloud" answers. As a Dropbox user including plus for well over a decade I now find all folders and files "clouded" without this automated switchover having been clearly notified and alternatives clearly communicated. Like other responders above, I need to be able to access Dropbox based information OFFLINE and from any of my devices, and DO NOT FIND IT ACCEPTABLE to have to somehow tediously backtrack topdown implemented, automated status switches in order to be able to restore, as an option, what was previously my default working method. Dropbox for many and for many reasons is used as an option preferable to the Cloud and exclusively online stocked information - that's why some of us are prepared to pay a supplement for its services. I feel cheated as a customer!
- Megan10 months agoDropbox Staff
Hey spiralos, let's jump right into this!
Would you be able to share some additional info for me to understand better the situation at hand?
What is the exact issue you're facing? Do you notice any errors when trying to locate and open your files, and if so, which platform do you use?
Keep me posted, and we'll take it from there!
- mupparina9 months agoNew member | Level 2
I am having the same issue as well, as a loyal Dropbox user for 10+ years. I noticed this because files I knew I had saved just magically started disappearing from my Dropbox (which I accessed through a favorites link in the Mac OS). Then I realized through Search that I had in effect TWO dropboxes, one created in November (not by me) that was in the ~Library/CloudStorage and one that worked with all my shortcuts/was local. I too want to have everything available locally. I now have effectively two dropboxes going and files are saving all over -- some times to the cloud, sometimes locally, and it's REALLY ANNOYING especially since files are now not syncing -- there is new material in both the local and the cloud and I have no idea how to reconcile them. I'd like to download everything so I can just switch to a new platform as well because this is maddening. Is there a way to sync these without losing content from one or the other, given that the filed names etc. are duplicated?
- Bruce M.198 months agoNew member | Level 2
That's now my problem two. Working on a legal case and was working on the wrong version. HOW DO I SYNCHRONIZE MY DROPBOX FOLDERS??? WHICH ONE SHOULD I REMOVE?
- Jay8 months agoDropbox Staff
Hi Bruce M.19, which Dropbox folder on your computer has the syncing icons on them? This would be the one currently linked to the desktop app, and should have the latest information synced from the site.
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