I also suspect they're doing some level of malware screening. If so, it didn't work too well here - not that this is malware (the author of the original service that created these docs is a personal friend) but it has a lot of similar code / functionality. On Mon, Sep 16, 2013 at 11:31 AM, Reed Black <reed@unsafeword.org> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 2:14 AM, stef <s@ctrlc.hu> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 07:58:17AM +0200, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Dropbox is pulling a Skype.
no it's not, it's generating thumbnails.
Dropbox generates thumbnails and optimized document views for smartphone clients. This could happen on demand, or it could be batched after the upload. Checking whether the embedded link is accessed a second time on displaying a doc on a smartphone might be revealing.
It also wouldn't be surprising if they were working on some kind of content indexing as other sync services are. Cloud storage is a competitive space, and Dropbox needs to keep up in order to maintain their rather high price per unit of storage.
Some Dropbox developers are visible in their forums if someone wants to ask first-hand.
This level of scrutiny doesn't make sense for any service with a closed source, self-updating client, however. Even if they encrypted client-side, made every kind of promise and did everything else perfectly, they could be compelled to quietly change things overnight. That could happen for everybody, or for just a few users who get slipped a different version.
-- @kylemaxwell