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Intro/Projects
- Subject: Intro/Projects
- From: jnn at synfin.org (John Newman)
- Date: Tue, 06 Dec 2016 11:59:44 -0500
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <eIfci0ClrZ7PvtVirnFHKDiw92dcCwOVm0p4ZoiyRpZs1oKQh4aQaZuvI9VnQ3bNOvkiagBJAN7BgT5n4IIulqo4KU-Pm4_VGQqkwFiH46o=@protonmail.com> <[email protected]$> <[email protected]>
If you have a keybase account, you can access something similar with kbfs. Although the idea behind it is data signing, not encryption.... Actually, I think it's mostly useless at the moment, but could turn into something cool.
John
On December 6, 2016 10:07:22 AM EST, Razer <rayzer at riseup.net> wrote:
>
>
>On 12/05/2016 11:53 PM, Georgi Guninski wrote:
>> On Tue, Dec 06, 2016 at 01:43:21AM -0500, Charles Fox wrote:
>>> Hi Everyone,
>>>
>>> I'm new to the list and to encryption generally. I don't consider
>myself a good programmer but I needed to learn a little about gpg for
>work and I'm increasingly curious about it. I had two ideas for things
>I could build but I want to know if they've already been done/whether
>they're bad ideas:
>>>
>>> 1) Cloud storage.
>>> I think it would be relatively easy to write a program where any
>file I save in folder X automatically gets encrypted and saved to
>folder Y Box/Dropbox/etc. Any new files saved in Y which my key can
>open get opened and put in folder X. Since the private key password
>would be saved for this to work automatically, it would be worthless if
>someone got on my machine, but if one of the cloud providers gets
>compromised, all they would have is a collection of encrypted files.
>>>
>> AFAIK there are many solutions for this on decent OSes, don't know if
>> any uses exactly gpg.
>>
>> Probably it is significantly easier to encrypt at file system level,
>not
>> at individual files.
>>
>> Search the web for "encrypted filesystem cloud" (without the quotes),
>> there are many results and tutorials.
>
>I believe mega.co.nz does this when you upload using their application
>or browser extension. The encryption is done on your computer before
>upload, and is stored onsite encrypted.
>
>Rr
--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
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