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Forum Discussion
Dibrom
4 years agoHelpful | Level 7
How to permanently stop the auto-backup of USB connected temp drives (W7)
How can I permanently configure DropBox to NOT try and backup every single USB drive I connect to the computer and thus depositing its little .dropbox.device file into the root folder without permiss...
Dibrom
Helpful | Level 7
Do I presume from the lack of response that Dropbox know about this annoying behaviour with USB connected drives and have no intention of allowing it to be stopped?
Megan
4 years agoDropbox Staff
Hi Dibrom!
Your feedback regarding this has been very valuable and I will endeavor to make sure your voice is heard.
I will pass on your comments to the relevant departments since your needs are our priority.
Your comments on our external hard drive have been quite helpful, and I will do everything I can to ensure that your voice is heard.
If you need anything, I'm here.
Your feedback regarding this has been very valuable and I will endeavor to make sure your voice is heard.
I will pass on your comments to the relevant departments since your needs are our priority.
Your comments on our external hard drive have been quite helpful, and I will do everything I can to ensure that your voice is heard.
If you need anything, I'm here.
- Dibrom4 years agoHelpful | Level 7
So that's a firm NO then? There is no way currently to stop the Dropbox app from doing this everytime a new USB drive is connected? Not even a registry key or a hidden backdoor switch that will disable the interference with connected USB drives?
Until Dropbox decides to provide a way for the user to stop it attacking temporarily connected USB drives, I have found that dropping a zero byte file called .dropbox.device into the root folder of the drive does trick Dropbox into thinking its own POS file is already there and thus stops it recreating its own. Not ideal, but better than nothing.
- dbur3 years agoNew member | Level 2
What a rude thing to do. Pisses me off it started by itself and won't quit. Had to use task manager to kill all dropbox entities. Now how do I get all that useless backup data out of my account since I don't have space for it.
- Dibrom2 years agoHelpful | Level 7
You can't is the short answer. Dropbox is much the same as Microsoft, Google, Apple etc. these days in that your computer or 'device' is not yours to use as you wish. You are just renting it temporarily for as long as the 'service providers' like Dropbox deign to let you use it, until such time as they decide you need to pay more money and then they cut you off.
You will use Dropbox only as Dropbox want you to use it and in no other way that is not to Dropbox's advantage, and if you don't like that, well, the door's over there.
This is why I'm still using Windows 7, the last paid for version of Windows that you can still configure to be your own and use as you want it to be used, rather than gifting all your personal data freely to Microsoft via Windows 10/11's forced telemetry.
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