Microsoft Cuts OneDrive Storage Limits, Citing Abuse (onedrive.com) 330
An anonymous reader writes: Microsoft previously offered Office 365 subscribers unlimited space on their OneDrive cloud storage platform. Now, the company has announced that it's reducing the limit to 1 TB, citing abuse from a small number of users, some of whom dropped 75 TB worth of data in Microsoft's cloud. In addition, Microsoft is cutting the size of their limited storage plans. They used to offer 100 GB for $2/month and 200 GB for 4$/month. Those plans are being replaced with 50 GB for $2/month (existing subscribers will get to keep their plans, for now). Microsoft is also decreasing the amount of space users get for free from 15 GB to 5 GB, and discontinuing the 15 GB camera roll bonus. These changes will roll out in "early 2016," and users will have up to a year to get down under the new caps.
Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't advertise as unlimited if uploading 70TB of data is too much. It's called false advertising and is against the law in European countries. Sadly, the US doesn't have good consumer protection laws.
Re:Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
I dunno, it's hardly false advertising to say "this policy isn't working for us, we're changing it going forward, but you can keep that extra storage for 12 months as compensation". Because that's what they're doing. Is it false advertising to ever change what plans you choose to offer?
Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:3)
It is false advertising to say it's unlimited and then institute limits on the existing contracts (accounts).
You can't one sided make changes to agreed to terms and services.
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It is false advertising to say it's unlimited and then institute limits on the existing contracts (accounts).
You can't one sided make changes to agreed to terms and services.
No, it's clearly in the terms and conditions "we can change anything we want anytime."....
Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
Pray they do not alter it further.
Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:4, Informative)
It is false advertising to say it's unlimited and then institute limits on the existing contracts (accounts).
Yes, but that's NOT what Microsoft is doing. They are letting people know, well in advance, that their terms are changing, and customers are given a year to either accept these new terms or find another service.
You can't one sided make changes to agreed to terms and services.
Of course you can, if the original agreed upon terms say that you can:
"7. Updates to the Services or Software, and Changes to These Terms.
a. We may change these Terms at any time, and we’ll tell you when we do. Using the Services after the changes become effective means you agree to the new terms. If you don’t agree to the new terms, you must stop using the Services, close your Microsoft account and/or Skype account and, if you are a parent or guardian, help your minor child close his or her Microsoft account or Skype account."
And...
"c. Additionally, there may be times when we need to remove or change features or functionality of the Service or stop providing a Service or access to Third-Party Apps and Services altogether. Except to the extent required by applicable law, we have no obligation to provide a re-download or replacement of any material, Digital Goods (defined in section 14(b)(v)), or applications previously purchased. We may release the Services or their features in a beta version, which may not work correctly or in the same way the final version may work."
source: https://www.microsoft.com/en-u... [microsoft.com]
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Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:2)
In the US you probably can. In the EU EULA's like that haven't been upheld. In the EU you can't one-sided change any contracts even if the contract says you can. If you want to change contracts, both parties have to agree and you can't discontinue a contract outside it's terms by forcing someone to agree to new terms before continuing service. Hence most EULA's have to be accepted again when terms change however some won't allow you to continue if you don't accept them which is illegal on both sides of the
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Of course you can. Businesses change their terms of service all the time. You're not entitled to endlessly exploit any business that has set unprofitable terms, so needs to change policies.
That is not in question. The question is should companies that knowingly advertise a product or service be obligated to pay a penalty for changing said product or service after the customer has paid for it. As I recall, Office 365 was a subscription up for up to four years. I am fine with Microsoft's terms of service allowing changes as long as they offer a full refund of any unused portion of the subscription. Offering to allow the customer to disagree with the changes and only giving them the option o
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Well, don't forget, in the US the EULA is magical.
It basically says "we can change damned near anything, you can't, we can do anything with your data, if you don't like it piss off and stop using the service -- and if you really don't like it and won't piss off, you agree to an arbitration procedure of our own choosing which you definitely won't like".
Except for things which couldn't possibly be enforceable in a contract, corporations can do a
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I dunno, it's hardly false advertising to say "this policy isn't working for us, we're changing it going forward, but you can keep that extra storage for 12 months as compensation". Because that's what they're doing. Is it false advertising to ever change what plans you choose to offer?
If they advertised unlimited storage with no restrictions or time limit, and someone spent considerable time (and internet bandwidth) to upload 75TB of data, then does indeed seem like false advertising to some back later and say "Oh, hey, you know when we said unlimited? Well, we meant "with limits", so you have to move your data somewhere else".
Surely someone at Microsoft marketing has a dictionary and could have looked up the word "unlimited" before advertising that storage was "unlimited", and I'm cert
Re:Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
They advertised unlimited and provided unlimited, now they're warning everyone it's not unlimited, and in a year will stop providing unlimited. There's no way you can twist that to be false advertising.
It's always annoying what a company changes a product in a way you don't like, or raises prices for the same thing, but that has nothing to do with false advertising. Companies that do that excessively are good to avoid, of course, but products do evolve over time.
Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:3, Interesting)
It's definitely anti-competitive which MS is restricted of doing in the EU. You can't just offer unlimited until you get the market share or force competition out and then change terms.
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Luckily for MS it is no longer a monopoly thanks to Google and Apple.
Also there is no way that MS is anywhere close to being the market leader in the cloud storage market...
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The sad thing is that this aspect of the situation is the only part of it that could even potentially lead to punishment. Us peasants don't have any power to sue over Microsoft's fraud. Large corporations that were put at a disadvantage by Microsoft's lies still have standing to sue.
Basically, suing for fraud and false advertising is reserved for "corporate competitors only".
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I dunno, it's hardly false advertising to say "this policy isn't working for us, we're changing it going forward, but you can keep that extra storage for 12 months as compensation". Because that's what they're doing. Is it false advertising to ever change what plans you choose to offer?
I kinda think it is unfair to advertise this platform as a backup and they severely limit it's abilities to be that backup. People will switch to one drive for that amount of space. that's some switchable space and then to reduce unlimited back up to 1TB with 12 months to find an alternative solution.. that's almost cruel. With the era of home videos getting bigger and bigger. More and more legitimate people are using that large amount of space. This isn't just a crew of nerds storing their DC++ porn on One
Re:Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:4, Informative)
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First, it was 75TB, not 75GB. Very big difference. Second, they aren't saying 75TB is >= unlimited. They're saying they've decided unlimited isn't feasible and are discontinuing it as an option. Completely different.
They're also calling the upload of 75TB abuse, which it isn't.
Re:Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Informative)
actually, they're not. TFA does not use the word abuse; that was injected by the submitter or editor. MS described the use of 75TB as an "extreme backup scenario"
Re: Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:3, Funny)
One station wagon on the Interstate...
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The place I work at has a pair of 500Mbit connections, which would easily allow for 5 or 6 terabytes a day (10 terabytes if you were to saturate both pipes with it, but that's not exactly realistic).
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It's still a dick move. I had a lot of encrypted data on OneDrive until today when I cancelled and started migration away. It represents a large investment of time uploading a few terabytes.
Microsoft seems to have been incredibly naÃve. Many other services offer unlimited storage for similar prices. They must have done the maths but thought no one would really use their product, even though services like BackBlaze have said publicly that some users have many tens of terabytes backed up.
OneDrive was bet
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Microsoft never called the 70TB upload "abuse".
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Don't advertise as unlimited if uploading 70TB of data is too much.
Exactly. The whole incident did give me a good laugh. They offered a service, then complain and call it "abuse" when a customer uses the service as it was advertised.
Hopefully the "offenders" go to the trouble to get a refund from Microsoft.
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Don't advertise as unlimited if uploading 70TB of data is too much. It's called false advertising and is against the law in European countries. Sadly, the US doesn't have good consumer protection laws.
Actually the US generally does have good consumer protection laws, but it's not that simple here. First, someone would have sue and it would have to be someone who actually got impacted by the change. US courts don't like it at all when you sue and you're not someone who's been victimized, so you can't sue just because you don't like the changes if you weren't a user who "abused" the old lack of limits. Then literally anything at all can happen when it goes to court. If you get a jury trial all bets are
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That's quite a long paragraph for a good system of consumer protection laws! Although the problem sounds like enforcement.
EU countries tend to have an official regulator (either an industry group or the government). The regulator can handle complaints made to them, or perhaps act without a complaint.
I know the UK best, so I'll give two examples.
"Trading Standards" (local government) will challenge businesses with false measurements, inaccurate ingredients on food etc. This can end in court or jail for a wi
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Re:Using your advertised space != Abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
I thought all the Microsoft data was stored in Ireland. Wasn't that their previous excuse?
No, it's just their money [wikipedia.org] that is stored in Ireland.
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Ireland doesn't store the money, just launders it. The bulk of the money ends up in the Bahamas, primarily the banks on Grand Cayman.
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I thought all the Microsoft data was stored in Ireland. Wasn't that their previous excuse?
Of course not. *Some* of their data is stored in Ireland, but they're a global company with a lot of smart engineers who know that things like latency matter. They have more than one data center.
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Europeans whine about free stuff, news at 11.
Since when is an Office365 subscription free? I'd like in on that deal too.
The real definition of "abuse" (Score:5, Insightful)
Claiming you are offering some very large resource, then pulling that away in short order is REAL abuse.
If the number of people "abusing" the system (with only 75TB of data) then why couldn't Microsoft have just absorbed those users? That's only 75x the current limit, are the number of users of the system in the mere thousands?
I almost signed up with them to upload a few TB of photos/video I've taken over the years as an online backup. Good thing I didn't go with Microsoft!
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I ended up popping down some money to get 100gb of storage with Google. I'm at about 25gb at the moment, and it only costs me about $1 a month.
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https://aws.amazon.com/glacier... [amazon.com]
Amazon Glacier comes out pretty cheap for backups too.
I'm running 600GB+ for $4.50 a month.
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That's probably what I'm going with now (it's what I was thinking of originally) now that they have the Data Suitcase to load it up. Wasn't relishing the thought of transmitting several terabytes over my cable connection.
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Why not? Google has some of the most reliable datacenters available worldwide.
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When did they ever advertise unlimited email storage?
http://www.internetnews.com/xS... [internetnews.com]
Georges Harik, product management director for Gmail, said that, on the first anniversary of the service's launch, some very active users had begun to worry that the 1 gigabyte of storage that had seemed immense a year ago would soon be used up.
"We've had anxiety attacks as a few of the people who have been heavy Gmail users have been coming close to the limit," Harik said. "They've been asking us, 'what are you going to do?'"
The company determined, Harik said, that the right thing to do would be "to keep giving people more space forever."
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Of course, you left out the most important part of that article:
A Google spokesman said it was important not to characterize the ever-increasing storage as endless, because that is a mathematical impossibility.
If Google just kept adding 1 byte of space once every 5 years, that still satisfies "keep giving people more space forever." They never once claimed that the storage would be unlimited.
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Only 75TB? That seems like an awful lot for a home user. A stack of 75 1TB hard drives would be taller than you.
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Only 75TB? That seems like an awful lot for a home user. A stack of 75 1TB hard drives would be taller than you.
Yes, but a stack of 75TB Libraries of Congress would be shorter - since we're stating useless observations.
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75Tb is a $4,000 array for the house.
I know, because we have 10Tb filled and I am looking at putting one together.
It's not really as much as you think, a few dozen good TV series in HD, a few hundred HD movies, add in music and storage for 4 people. I can easily see us using 30Tb. If we were using Micro$oft cloud for storage of backups we could easily exceed 75Tb of backup data.
Personally, I dont trust there OS or there cloud.
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It's not really as much as you think, a few dozen good TV series in HD...
Sure, but at the rate they are produced, it will be decades before you have to worry about that.
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Who the hell has 75TB of data, anyway? What are these people doing, torrenting every movie they see?
Re:The real definition of "abuse" (Score:4, Insightful)
$100 worth of pennies stacked on top of each other is taller than me, but that doesn't mean that I'm not capable of having that much money.
No, but it does imply that you're less than 15.2 m tall.
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but in terms of raw storage, a stack of 38 9.5mm tall 2.5" 2TB drives would only be 361mm
You think Microsoft is using "2.5" notebook hard drives" in its storage cloud?
Even if they used 1TB drives
Well, that WAS the size he specifically mentioned.
Are you a midget?
Pretty obvious to everyone but you that he'd have been referring to standard 3.5" drives.
You know... something like...
http://www.amazon.com/Seagate-... [amazon.com]
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You think Microsoft is using "2.5" notebook hard drives" in its storage cloud?
It's Microsoft so I assume they're using those giant reel to reel things from the 1960s.
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but in terms of raw storage, a stack of 38 9.5mm tall 2.5" 2TB drives would only be 361mm
You think Microsoft is using "2.5" notebook hard drives" in its storage cloud?
A lot of enterprise storage actually uses small form factor (aka 2.5") hard drives because you can fit more drives in a chassis. Even in a lot of high-speed (10k and 15k rpm) 3.5" drives, the platters are not the full 3.5" size, they're more like a 2.5" platter in a 3.5" case.
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The modern term is "little person".
Re:The real definition of "abuse" (Score:4, Informative)
If the number of people "abusing" the system (with only 75TB of data) then why couldn't Microsoft have just absorbed those users? That's only 75x the current limit, are the number of users of the system in the mere thousands?
They probably could have, but the FAQ linked from TFA indicates that they're making these changes because they're not in the backup business, they want people to use OneDrive for collaboration and such.
From the FAQ [onedrive.com] (emphasis mine)
Why are we making changes?
Since starting to roll out unlimited cloud storage to Office 365 consumer subscribers, a small number of users backed up numerous PCs and stored entire movie collections and DVR recordings. In some instances, this exceeded 75 TB per user or 14,000 times the average. Instead of focusing on extreme backup scenarios, we want to remain focused on delivering high-value productivity and collaboration experiences that benefit the majority of OneDrive users.
So, the service was being used in ways that they didn't anticipate and that they don't want to support, so they're changing it, and giving you a year to make other arrangements. There are a lot of reasons to hate Microsoft, but that seems perfectly reasonable to me.
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Mod up AC - very informative.
It also points out the technical flaw in MS's decision. If the "abusers" are filling up that space with multiple backups, just handle that case. Backups are almost never read again. Facebook deals with very-infrequently accessed data by storing it in drives that are powered off. When the data is needed the drive is spun up (access to photos that no one has accessed in quite some time will simply fail to display them, but try again in 5 minutes and they're there). MS could j
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I know, ONLY 75TB of data. I mean who doesn't have that much data?
I am a digital packrat and I have no where close to that much data.
Daily backups can quickly eat that kind of storage. Say you want to be able to go back and recover a file that only existed for a day a year ago.
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What home user could possibly think it's reasonable to store 75TB of data on a cloud service? What possible legitimate use is there?
A copy of /dev/urandom seems sensible, in case you lose the device node.
Really, backups. Say a full backup monthly, and a tower-of-hanoi incremental approach for the rest of the days. If you want to be able to restore a file that only existed for a day a couple of years ago, you are going to have big backup needs.
I'm confused (Score:2)
If a service offers something, and use make use of that feature... how is that abuse?
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They admit user data snooping! (Score:5, Insightful)
How would they know about "entire movie collections" being stored?
So very comforting!
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If you're generating 75TB of movies/pictures/etc... you are not a "consumer", you are a content provider and should be using professional data storage systems anyway.
abuse from the people with 15GB space (Score:5, Informative)
They are citing abuse over 1TB but are cutting those having 15GB. Go figure...
Remember when Skydrive had 25GB free?
Half the space of Gdrive for the 1.99 plan ... that will go well.
Users will have up to a year to get under the new caps? Like how, once January 2016 comes you will only be able to delete stuff. Sure, they won't nuke your whopping 15GB of data but still you won't be able store/share/change anything once you are over the top...
Was this "abuse limit" advertised somewhere? (Score:2)
If not, sorry Microsoft, you don't get to whine if someone uploads 75 Tb to your unlimited free storage service. In fact, in some countries this would qualify as false advertising and deemed illegal.
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I don't see any whining anywhere.
Microsoft tried something and it didn't work as they expected.
At no point did they limit the people uploading 75TB of data and they are giving everyone plenty of time to adjust to the changes in pricing.
Worst case is you can call it a "bait and switch" move.... but really, its not like you are locked in to using OneDrive to store you stuff.... There is a LOT of competition in this area.
I too am affected by this. I have 200GB of OneDrive storage and my cost will likely go up
Transcript of what happened (Score:2, Insightful)
Vintage Microsoft (Score:2, Funny)
When the cost of storage is going down they put the prices up. Maybe instead of OneDrive they should call it HalfDrive. Thanks MS but I think I'll stick with my Dropbox.
Yet another failed attempt to find a home in the post Gates era. Epic fail.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
OneDrive subscription Cancelled (Score:2)
Well, there goes my onedrive subscription.
I personally wasn't using 75TB, but I was up around 4TB - I got the OneDrive subscription to keep an updated mirror of my large storage RAID which has about that much space.
With a limited of 1TB I no longer have need of their services. Newsflash: if you advertise unlimited, people will use the feature as such. Nobody expects infinity, but what is considered extreme usage by you may well be considered normal by some of your users.
Unlimited lying (Score:2)
My GF's phone provider advertised "unlimited" and in the same ad mentioned "1 GB data". IMHO, it should be illegal to advertise "unlimited", since there's no such thing.
You would think these companies would learn (Score:4, Insightful)
This has been going on for years. Companies offer unlimited service, and then a hand full of customers try to see how far they can take it. You would think that they would have some standard boilerplate specifying something to the effect that while there is no specific limit, they reserve the right to cap accounts that are at or near the top of usage. I imagine these things are a typical bell curve with a long tail. I think clipping the crazy long tail of users who are using 100,000 more resources than average is perfectly legit. The lawyers need to put their heads together and come up with a commercial definition of "unlimited" that 99.9% of us can live with. The 0.1% who think they have a right to store 70TB for nothing are just as much dick-heads as anybody else.
Re:You would think these companies would learn (Score:5, Insightful)
Unlimited, as a word, has a meaning. That meaning becomes meaningless if you change the definition simply because someone fully tests the the terminology.
The point being, "Unlimited" is a great marketing term, but will cause issues in practicality. Do not use it if you can't fathom people pushing the limit towards infinity.
The lawyers need to put their heads together and come up with a commercial definition of "unlimited" that 99.9% of us can live with.
No, they don't. Marketing droids can say "We offer 'nearly unlimited*' storage" and then define what "nearly unlimited" actually means. e.g. "*Nearly Unlimited = 25 TB" (or whatever they want to define it as)
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Exactly words need to have meaning. Unlimited means exactly that and should. Therefor no business should really be offering anything unlimited ever. Generally 'unlimited' and basic economics are at odds.
There no good reason why Microsoft could not have just said 'up to 100TB of storage - more than most will ever need!' I suspect that would have been just fine for them too. I would be Microsoft is correct in that most of the 75+ TB users are probably morons who just wanted to see if there was an upper l
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Everybody knows there are limits to how literally you should take things. :)
Microsoft didn't see the high usage coming? (Score:5, Interesting)
.
Why should anyone believe them when they say "no"?
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Microsoft has said that Windows 10 will be free with no monthly or yearly charges. Is Microsoft going to renege on that also?
Actually they only said Windows 10 would be free for existing Windows 7, 8 and 8.1 machines for up to a year. Users that don't already have Windows (or a recent enough version) will have to buy retail copies.
Option to purchase more than 1TB (Score:2)
I would really like to see the option to purchase more than 1TB of storage.
I get that they can't offer it for free, that's fine. But we store the videos that we take with our phones on OneDrive, and that adds up quickly.
The phones even auto-upload all photos and videos taken. Right now, our video folder is about 700GB. This is not movies, or DVR content, or porn, this is home videos taken with a camera or cell phone.
That number will pass 1TB by the end of next year.
If I could pay some reasonable amount,
Alternatives (Score:2)
I've been using Sync.com [sync.com] for the past year. They've been sort of in beta but releasing features. 5GB free.
SpiderOak [spideroak.com] is decent but they recently dropped their free plan, so not sure what's going on there.
MEGA [mega.co.nz] was great but Kim.com said last week in Wired [wired.co.uk] that the company is run by criminals
Tresorit [tresorit.com] is good but expensive. Maybe that's why they've been around so long.
Bitcasa [bitcasa.com] pulled a Wuala last year and closed down
I promise (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously folks
This
is
the
Goddamned
Cloud!
Here today, and vanished into blue sky tomorrow.
Microsoft Not a Safe Bet For Services (Score:2)
Windows Live Mesh (discontinued)
Windows Live Folders (Renamed to Windows Live SkyDrive
Windows Live SkyDrive (Renamed to SkyDrive)
SkyDrive (Removed features and renamed to OneDrive
OneDrive (Removed groups, reduced storage)
Honestly, with their constant failures and reduction of features, why anyone would trust Microsoft with any online services I don't know.
They shouldn't have advertised it as "unlimited" (Score:2)
Wow, 5 whole Gigabytes? (Score:2)
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OneDrive is not meant to be a stand alone product. It is meant to integrate their Office 365 offerings by having a centralized storage location.
I am sure that Microsoft would rather you use a dedicated storage service like Dropbox if you are not going to buy into their ecosystem.
Also, while 5GB is not a lot, it is special-purpose storage. Putting things there gives you several benefits that just storing those things on local media cannot provide. It is not meant to be a place for every piece of information
So Microsoft is looking at your data. (Score:2)
Not really cool to have them checking out what you are storing. Glad I let my free sub expire.
What does their backing storage look like? (Score:3)
75 TB is kind of a lot of data by many standards, but I would not have expected it to be super meaningful by Global Evil Empire Scale standards.
My old Compellent certification books list an SC8000 controller as supporting 5 SC280 fully configured enclosures, for a total of 1.6PB raw in about 30U. They always talk about these data centers being extremely vast, so I would expect that storage would be approaching exabyte scale.
So I'm guessing that device capacity isn't the actual problem but instead its some kind of migration/load balancing/operation issue that makes user "blobs" of 75TB problematic.
Even the 1 TB space is partially mythical (Score:3)
I just signed up for 365 for business. I supposedly get a 1 TB OneDrive account with it. Sounds great, until you try to use it. I have a pretty solid business cable modem internet account. Reliably 50/10 mb/s. ...
Three days ago I dropped an existing folder that had about 60 GB of content in roughly 36,000 files into the OneDrive folder on my desktop PC.
As of this moment, less that 50% has synced to the cloud, after more than 72 hours.
Files are uploading at about 350kb/s at best, with lots of pauses..
There are no preferences in the OneDrive client that allow me to tell it to go ahead and use more bandwidth.
Upload rates to my Google Drive on the same computer can saturate my local upstream, 30 times faster than OneDrive.
So I was searching on "slow OneDrive" and found that the very slow upload is universal - and universally despised.
The same searches also revealed something that is not at all clear when you sign up for Office 365: there is a hard limit of 20,000 objects (files+folders).
For my files, with an average size of about 1.7 MB, the maximum I can store is 34 GB, about 3% of the advertised terabyte.
I feel cheated
And I now know the folder I wanted to upload has too many items. I'm not sure what I am going to do. The whole point of the OneDrive was to make a complete set of some business files on my desktop available to my laptop while traveling. Yes, I know lots of other ways to do this, but since I wanted the Office 365 account for mail hosting in any case, the OneDrive space was a nice bonus. Except it is not really usable at all, and that is very frustrating.
Re:Abuse? (Score:5, Informative)
Ah, never mind... RTFA, they don't call it abuse. Stupid summary, then.
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I think the abuse claim is cover for scaling issues. Why else would they reduce all the plans?
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All my porn is in ASCII format, so it doesn't take much room.
Re:Pron (Score:5, Funny)
All my porn is in ASCII format, so it doesn't take much room.
So is mine, but those ASCII movies still take up space and I have over 100TB in my collection -- especially the new 4K movies. You should see how many monitors I had to put up to display a 4096 x 2160 xterm.
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Dude, take a picture of your monitors - you could be the next big youtube star!
Photos (Score:2)
It's not a porno collection problem, it's a photograph and home movies problem.
The cloud is a great place to store those, and if you live for a decade or two, even if you don't photograph all the time, you get a lot. Add that to the documents you have and you go way over a 50G limit. Single SD cards are 8GB at this point. At $1/month for 25 GB, personal RAID starts looking better and better.
Re: Photos (Score:2)
I have about 8tb worth of movies and tv shows on my nas and was considering doing exactly this. I guess it's a good thing this happened before I started stitching together a hack to make this work with Ubuntu server.
Re:Photos (Score:4, Insightful)
In most cases, photos that turn out to be important or have high sentimental value aren't known at the time.
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30G IS after considerable culling.
The problem is accumulation. Interesting things accumulate over 5 or 10 or 20 years.
Plus, hard copies aren't nearly secure enough. Even the best archival quality printing will fade. That's even true just for the relatively short amount of time some of us have been keeping digital archives.
Perhaps you just never did anything interesting ever...
Re:Photos (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, hard copies aren't nearly secure enough. Even the best archival quality printing will fade. That's even true just for the relatively short amount of time some of us have been keeping digital archives.
Perhaps you just never did anything interesting ever...
One day you will die.
Your children, friends, neighbors, or government will then go through your crap and toss the vast majority of it out.
When those people die, the same will happen to them, and wait trace remained of your shit will be further diluted.
Your futile efforts to preserve everything are nothing but a symptom of your inability to accept your own mortality.
Even if you die on a cross or you end up buried in a pyramid, people will forget you and your mark on the world will fade out of existence.
TLDR: Let it go, let it goooooooo!
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Yeah, because everyone forgot about Tutankhamun, Cleopatra, Spartacus, Julius Caesar, Jesus, Mohammad, Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.
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Figure a reasonable person has maybe 1-5TB of hard drive space. At the extreme, they might average half a terabyte. You'll have a few power users who hold up like 3-4TB of shit, but they're not all too common.
You could put a cap somewhere, but it's nonsense. Someone might actually hit it; on the off chance that they do, you don't really care. The average doesn't shift too much, so you're figuring on middle-ground numbers around where you expected. It's fine.
Then: Every single person in the world so
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That actually seems reasonable.
Wow-- some accounts have 75TB of data. Some of the files are 25GB! WTH? What kind of data is that? It's a bluray image. Mein Gott!
Okay this is ridiculous. It's not how we intended this service to be used. Why can't people be reasonable? There's always a few people that shit in the pond.
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Got no experience with OneDrive. But I have used dropbox and GDrive. Dropbox functioned way superior in this case, never really caused issues.
GDrive on the other hand once deleted ALL data by mistake of an syncing error (yes, could be recovered, but that was shitloads of work), and you shit yourself when you see all your files disappear.
I've also had a few times that GDrive refused to sync at all, without a clear cause. It just kept refusing.
The web interface can be dog slow when you have 1000+ files in a f