Rakuten launches cloud storage with unlimited file transfers, targets businesses and individuals, with free 10GB storage (www.techradar.com)
from Squire1039@lemm.ee to technology@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 02:41
https://lemm.ee/post/24171266

Highlights:

#technology

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Reverendender@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 2024 03:00 next collapse

I am inclined to think the privacy protections on this would be awful.

cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de on 19 Feb 2024 03:21 collapse

Encrypt everything before uploading it.

gregorum@lemm.ee on 19 Feb 2024 03:55 collapse

For 10 GB of storage? Meh. It feels like setting this up would be a headache unless someone really needed it for something iffy. It’s so tiny.

GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Feb 2024 04:52 next collapse

1TB for $8/month isn’t bad. Cheaper than Google anyway. Never mind, it’s actually more expensive than Google and others. See below.

I’d rather go for something with E2EE anyway.

Nyfure@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 09:34 next collapse

Hetzner Storagebox is $3.5/M for 1TB

ObsidianZed@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 16:45 collapse

What are you basing that off of??

Google is 2TB for $10/month.

$8.33/month with the annual plan.

GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Feb 2024 18:30 collapse

This says $20/month. one.google.com/about/plans

Is there a cheaper drive-only option?

PrefersAwkward@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 19:05 collapse

The page you linked shows an annual plan of 100$ for 2 TB which means 8.33 per month.

GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Feb 2024 19:52 collapse

Doh, I misread. I saw $20 and thought that was the monthly price, but that’s actually for 2 months, before annual discount. Never mind.

So…yeah, who is Rakuten trying to compete with?

Tangent5280@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 07:55 collapse

Cryptomator is free and about as easy as encryption comes.

Pons_Aelius@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 03:10 next collapse

unlimited file transfers, unlike competitors.

Looking into my crystal ball...

I give this 2-3 months before file transfers are limited due to multi-terrabyte daily transfers from accounts hosting pirated media.

Empricorn@feddit.nl on 19 Feb 2024 05:57 collapse

…or just due to plain old corporate greed enshittification.

Pons_Aelius@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 06:05 collapse

Nah, that will come 3 months later when to keep providing a world class service they will have to discontinue the free accounts.

But don't worry, they will give existing customers great upgrade deals.

fubarx@lemmy.ml on 19 Feb 2024 06:44 next collapse

Speedrunning Dropbox, box.com, …

Dirk@lemmy.ml on 19 Feb 2024 06:59 next collapse

10 Gigabytes! That are almost two 4K movies with heavy compression.

THE_MASTERMIND@feddit.ch on 19 Feb 2024 16:59 collapse

is* not are

/s (also i wanna appreciate the grammer nerds who motivated me to make this comment ).

aleonem@lemmy.today on 20 Feb 2024 04:22 collapse

*grammar

HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Feb 2024 07:30 next collapse

Oh, boy! As an American consumer, I’m even more perplexed what the hell they are.

Like 15 years ago, Rakuten seemed to be a normal ecommerce site. I think they bought buy.com or something to get a foothold in the US market. Then they pivoted to being some sort of cashback referral service.

I’m not really sure why that would lead customers to think “yeah, I want cloud storage from the people who made a weird janky digital simulation of the Piggly Wiggly Value Club Card!”

(AWS made it work because they could say “we have the infrastructure to host one of the busiest sites on earth, it’s good enough for you”, but Rakuten does not have that credibility in the US)

catloaf@lemm.ee on 19 Feb 2024 15:50 collapse

They do a lot of things, mostly related to online retailing in Japan. They bought Ebates, presumably to get all the shopping data they collect, it wasn’t really a pivot. (Also they’d been doing financial-ish stuff like rewards programs before apparently. I went and read their Wikipedia article when I saw this post.)

jayandp@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 2024 17:03 collapse

They also bought Kobo, a Kindle competitor that I actually like. (Partially because you can still easily remove their DRM).

Telodzrum@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 18:10 collapse

The hardware is better, too. It’ll be a cold day in hell before I go back to a Kindle.

smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de on 19 Feb 2024 08:18 next collapse

And what protocols do they support?

Archer@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 10:18 next collapse

I have literally never heard of this company before and it sounds like particularly unsubtle Indian scammers

Pons_Aelius@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 10:32 next collapse

Headline:

One of Japan's largest tech companies just launched its own cloud storage service

FMT99@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 13:45 collapse

Yeah but I can’t be bothered to google it so it must be a scam.

morbidcactus@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 2024 10:38 next collapse

They have a whole bunch of purchases, the one I’m familiar with is Kobo years ago

cashews_best_nut@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 11:59 next collapse

They took over a UK company called Play.com that was big in the 2010s for cheap CD purchases.

AFC1886VCC@reddthat.com on 19 Feb 2024 12:08 collapse

Play.com was the shit.

[deleted] on 19 Feb 2024 14:43 next collapse

.

overdevs@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 16:28 collapse

I get it, you don’t watch football/soccer.

bartvbl@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 12:18 next collapse

For personal backups I can recommend Jottacloud, although they only have servers in Norway.

NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 13:23 next collapse

Is it 10 Gigabyte or Terabyte?

MonkderZweite@feddit.ch on 19 Feb 2024 14:15 next collapse

For a while, until they don’t.

bruhduh@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 15:16 next collapse

If they support webdav then it means free 10gb swap “ram”

laverabe@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 17:17 next collapse

SaaSS (service as a software substitute) bullshit

It is common for SaaSS dis-services to charge a monthly fee for use. Usually one SaaSS site does not substitute for another, so if users become unhappy with one dis-service provider it is no easy matter to switch to another. When users become dependent on one, it can gouge them at will with repeated small price increases that over time add up to a lot. We view the loss of freedom inherent in SaaSS as worse than the cost in money, but when a dis-service has you over a barrel, the cost can be painful. Thus, even users who don’t see deeper than the bottom line should beware of SaaSS.

Businesses should host their own servers.

gnu.org/…/who-does-that-server-really-serve.en.ht…

[deleted] on 19 Feb 2024 17:48 collapse

.

Limonene@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 18:39 collapse

Nobody’s saying to host it on-premises. The SaaSS article is advocating running software that you control on servers that you control. That’s it. The server is likely in a datacenter, and its hardware could be owned by the datacenter, the customer, or someone else. It could be a virtualized host.

The SaaSS article is about software and services, not hardware.

s0ckpuppet@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 17:41 collapse

Who is this even for? 10 gigs is a rounding era in drive space.

AxiomPraxis@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 20:06 next collapse

Rakuten are the ones who make Kobo, a Kindle competitor that’s more popular outside of the US - I have a Kobo.

Likely this is to eventually integrate into their Kobo device offerings, to let you upload your own .epubs (as opposed to Amazon .mobi). 10GB may be small fish for everything else but for ebook storage it’s more than you’d ever need.

s0ckpuppet@kbin.social on 19 Feb 2024 20:56 collapse

Ah makes sense

NateNate60@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 2024 20:17 collapse

People aren’t storing massive amounts of data on cloud storage. For text document storage or even a moderate number of images, 10 GB is enough for many people.