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File-hosting service

Internet hosting service for user files


Internet hosting service for user files

A file-hosting service, also known as cloud-storage service, online file-storage provider, or cyberlocker, is an internet hosting service specifically designed to host user files. These services allow users to upload files that can be accessed over the internet after providing a username and password or other authentication. Typically, file hosting services allow HTTP access, and in some cases, FTP access. Other related services include content-displaying hosting services (i.e. video and image), virtual storage, and remote backup solutions.

Uses

Personal file storage

Personal file storage services are designed for private individuals to store and access their files online. Users can upload their files and share them publicly or keep them password-protected.

Document-sharing services allow users to share and collaborate on document files. These services originally targeted files such as PDFs, word processor documents, and spreadsheets. However many remote file storage services are now aimed at allowing users to share and synchronize all types of files across all the devices they use.

File sync and sharing services

File syncing and sharing services allow users to create special folders on each of their computers or mobile devices, which are then synchronized across all devices. Files placed in this folder can be accessed through a website or mobile app and easily shared with others for viewing or collaboration.

Consumer products such as OneDrive and Google Drive have made file hosting and sharing more accessible and popular for personal and business use.

Content caching

Content providers who encounter bandwidth congestion issues may use specialized services for distributing cached or static content. This is especially common for companies with a major internet presence.

Backup and disaster recovery

Many businesses use file hosting services as part of their backup and disaster recovery strategies. By storing copies of important files offsite in a secure data center, they can quickly recover from data loss due to hardware failure, natural disasters, or other unexpected events.

Storage charges

Some online file storage services offer space on a per-gigabyte basis, and sometimes include a bandwidth cost component as well. Usually these will be charged monthly or yearly. Some companies offer the service for free, relying on advertising revenue. Some hosting services do not place any limit on how much space the user's account can consume. Non-paying users' accounts may be deleted or suspended after a predefined period of inactivity.

Some services require a software download which makes files only available on computers which have that software installed, others allow users to retrieve files through any web browser. With the increased inbox space offered by webmail services, many users have started using their webmail service as an online drive. Some sites offer free unlimited file storage but have a limit on the file size. Some sites offer additional online storage capacity in exchange for new customer referrals.

Many providers offer tiered storage levels, charging differently based on frequency of access and retrieval latency. There may be a different cost associated with access vs storage. For example, in a cold storage scenario, the price per GB stored over time can be very low, but it may take longer to access an item at a higher per GB retrieval cost. In some cases, users may have to commit to retrieval being much higher latency as well.

One-click hosting

One-click hosting, sometimes referred to as cyberlocker generally describes web services that allow internet users to easily upload one or more files from their hard drives (or from a remote location) onto the one-click host's server free of charge.

Most such services simply return a URL which can be given to other people, who can then fetch the file later. In many cases these URLs are predictable allowing potential misuse of the service. these sites have drastically increased in popularity, and subsequently, many of the smaller, less efficient sites have failed. Although one-click hosting can be used for many purposes, this type of file sharing has, to a degree, come to compete with P2P filesharing services.

The sites make money through advertising or charging for premium services such as increased downloading capacity, removing any wait restrictions the site may have or prolonging how long uploaded files remain on the site. Premium services include facilities like unlimited downloading, no waiting, maximum download speed etc. Many such sites implement a CAPTCHA to prevent automated downloading. Several programs aid in downloading files from these one-click hosts; examples are JDownloader, FreeRapid, Mipony, Tucan Manager and CryptLoad.

Security

The emergence of cloud storage services has prompted much discussion on security. Security, as it relates to cloud storage can be broken down into:

Access and integrity security

Deals with the question of confidentiality and availability, and may be expressed with questions of the kind: Will the user be able to continue accessing their data? Who else can access it? Who can change it?

Whether the user is able to continue accessing their data depends on a large number of factors, ranging from the location and quality of their internet connection, and the physical integrity of the provider's data center, to the financial stability of the storage provider (because, even if perfectly fit from a technical point of view, if the provider financially goes out of business, then its services go offline too).

The question of who can access and, potentially, change, their data, ranges from what physical access controls are in place in the provider's data center to what technical steps have been taken, such as access control, encryption, etc.

Many cloud storage services state that they either encrypt data before it is uploaded or while it is stored. While encryption is generally regarded as best practice in cloud storage how the encryption is implemented is very important.

Consumer-grade, public file hosting and synchronization services are popular, but for business use, they create the concern that corporate information is exported to devices and cloud services that are not controlled by the organization.

Some cloud storage providers offer granular ACLs for application keys. One important permission is append-only, which is distinct from simple "read", "write", and "read-write" permissions in that all existing data is immutable. Append-only support is especially important to mitigate the risk of data loss for backup policies in the event that the computer being backed-up becomes infected with ransomware capable of deleting or encrypting the victim's backups.{{cite book| title=PayBreak: Defense Against Cryptographic Ransomware| author1=Kolodenker, E.| author2=Koch, W.| author3=Stringhini, G.| author4=Egele, M.| url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/315862748| date=2 April 2017| access-date=5 December 2023| doi=10.1145/3052973.3053035| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201022012939/https://eugenekolo.com/static/paybreak.pdf| url-status=live| archive-date=22 October 2020}}

Data encryption

Secret key encryption is sometimes referred to as zero knowledge, meaning that only the user has the encryption key needed to decrypt the data. Since data is encrypted using the secret key, identical files encrypted with different keys will be different. To be truly zero knowledge, the file hosting service must not be able to store the user's passwords or see their data even with physical access to the servers. For this reason, secret key encryption is considered the highest level of access security in cloud storage. This form of encryption is rapidly gaining popularity, with companies such as MEGA (previously Megaupload) and SpiderOak being entirely zero knowledge file storage and sharing.

Since secret key encryption results in unique files, it makes data deduplication impossible and therefore may use more storage space.

Convergent encryption derives the key from the file content itself and means an identical file encrypted on different computers result in identical encrypted files. This enables the cloud storage provider to de-duplicate data blocks, meaning only one instance of a unique file (such as a document, photo, music or movie file) is actually stored on the cloud servers but made accessible to all uploaders. A third party who gained access to the encrypted files could thus easily determine if a user has uploaded a particular file simply by encrypting it themselves and comparing the outputs.

Some point out that there is a theoretical possibility that organizations such as the RIAA, MPAA, or a government could obtain a warrant for US law enforcement to access the cloud storage provider's servers and gain access to the encrypted files belonging to a user. By demonstrating to a court how applying the convergent encryption methodology to an unencrypted copyrighted file produces the same encrypted file as that possessed by the user would appear to make a strong case that the user is guilty of possessing the file in question and thus providing evidence of copyright infringement by the user.

There is, however, no easily accessible public record of this having been tried in court as of May 2013 and an argument could be made that, similar to the opinion expressed by Attorney Rick G. Sanders of Aaron | Sanders PLLC in regards to the iTunes Match "Honeypot" discussion, that a warrant to search the cloud storage provider's servers would be hard to obtain without other, independent, evidence establishing probable cause for copyright infringement. Such legal restraint would obviously not apply to the secret police of an oppressive government who could potentially gain access to the encrypted files through various forms of hacking or other cybercrime.

Ownership security

References

References

  1. "Share OneDrive files and folders".
  2. "Cloud Storage: File Hosting and Synchronisation 2.0".
  3. (9 July 2013). "How Dropbox Could Rule a Multi-Platform World".
  4. [http://www.download3k.com/articles/MultCloud-Review-Manage-multiple-cloud-services-search-and-transfer-between-them-00949 How to transfer files from Dropbox to Google Drive] {{Webarchive. link. (12 November 2016 . Retrieved 24 December 2014)
  5. "Macworld.com".
  6. (16 September 2021). "Introduction to Backup and Disaster Recovery {{!}} IBM".
  7. Cahane, Amir. (15 September 2021). "The Right not to Forget: Cloud Based Services Moratoriums in War Zones and Data Portability Rights". Rights to Privacy and Data Protection in Armed Conflict.
  8. Stockton, Ben. (2020-11-20). "Hot Storage vs Cold Storage in 2023: Instant Access vs Archiving".
  9. "Cyberlockers Take Over File-Sharing Lead From BitTorrent Sites".
  10. Nikiforakis N., Balduzzi M. Van Acker S., Joosen W. and Balzarotti D. [http://www.usenix.org/event/leet11/tech/full_papers/Nikiforakis.pdf "Exposing the Lack of Privacy in File Hosting Services] {{Webarchive. link. (15 September 2011)
  11. Roettgers, Janko. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130603125434/http://gigaom.com/2007/06/17/one-click-hosters/ "Piracy Beyond P2P: One-Click Hosters"], Retrieved: 5 January 2008.
  12. (2010-05-19). "RIAA joins congressional caucus in unveiling first-ever list of notorious illegal sites". [[RIAA]].
  13. Legal case: OLG Dusseldorf, Judgement of 22.03.2010, Az I-20 U 166/09 dated 22 March 2010.
  14. Roettgers, Janko. (2010-05-03). "RapidShare Wins in Court". Gigaom.com.
  15. From the ''Atari v. RapidShare'' ruling: "entspricht einem Generalverdacht gegen Sharehoster-Dienste und ihre Nutzer, der so nicht zu rechtfertigen ist" ("corresponds to a general suspicion against shared hosting services and their users, which is not to justify such").
  16. [https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052970204616504577171180266957116 Department of Justice indictment, on the ''Wall Street Journal''{{'s website] {{Webarchive. link. (15 July 2012 – see sections 7–14.)
  17. "Release For Victim Notification ''United States v. Kim Dotcom, et al'', Crim. No. 1:12CR3 (E.D. Va. O'Grady, J.)". United States Department of Justice.
  18. Prabhu, Vijay. (17 October 2016). "Yet Another Video Streaming Service Bites The Dust, Putlocker Shuts Down". TechWorm.
  19. Sandoval, Greg. (31 March 2012). "MPAA wants more criminal cases brought against 'rogue' sites". [[CNET]].
  20. Jonathan Strickland. (30 April 2008). "How Cloud Storage Works". How Stuff Works.
  21. "Cloud Data Storage, Encryption and Data Protection Best Practices". Techtarget.com.
  22. "BorgBase - Secure hosting for your BorgBackup Repos".
  23. (11 September 2018). "Why Use Immutable Storage?".
  24. (1 November 2019). "Secure IT Systems".
  25. (26 May 2012). "5 Ways To Securely Encrypt Your Files in the Cloud". Makeuseof.com.
  26. "MEGA has been designed around user-controlled end-to-end encryption. MEGA's end-to-end encryption (E2EE) paradigm enhances the overall security by providing 'privacy by design', unlike many of its competitors who only provide 'privacy by policy'.".
  27. "SpiderOak - Zero Knowledge Privacy with Encrypted Cloud Backup".
  28. "Secure Data Deduplication". Ssrc.ucsc.edu.
  29. Brad McCarty. (23 September 2011). "Bitcasa: Infinite storage comes to your desktop, but so do big questions".
  30. Brad McCarty. (16 September 2011). "Is iTunes Match a honeypot for music pirates? A copyright lawyer weighs in".
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