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Too many users abused unlimited Dropbox plans, so they’re getting limits

Too many users abused unlimited Dropbox plans, so they’re getting limits::Some people have taken "as much space as you need" too literally.

datahoarder @lemmy.ml

Too many users abused unlimited Dropbox plans, so they’re getting limits

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149 comments
  • How the fuck do you abuse unlimited access? This is just a company blaming an idea that was always going to be unsustainable on their customers and not their own damn lack of forethought.

    • It was a business plan and they found hardly any of the plan subscribers were actually businesses, and I'm guessing reselling your unlimited data was against the ToS.

      • It was a business plan and they found hardly any of the plan subscribers were actually businesses

        And why the fuck would that matter? If they can't handle some random's porn and piracy collection, how the fuck would they handle a legit business? lol

        Reselling an account would hurt their bottom line, but still have no effect on providing the storage. Imposing a limit doesn't stop that though, other than perhaps by making the product worthless and therefore unworthy of reselling.

    • They didn't mean unlimited use. They meant "sign up, forget about it and pay us forever".

  • "Abused" service they were advertised. Now it is misadvertisement.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    This was intended to free business users from needing to worry about quotas.

    The company said in a blog post yesterday that it was retiring its unlimited storage policy specifically because people were buying Dropbox Advanced accounts "for purposes like crypto and Chia mining, unrelated individuals pooling storage for personal use cases, or even instances of reselling storage."

    Dropbox also says that this behavior has been getting worse recently because other services have also been placing caps on their storage plans—at some point within the last year, Google also removed similar "as much as you need" language from its Google Workspace plans.

    Rather than attempting to police behavior or play whack-a-mole with the people abusing the service, Dropbox has imposed a 15TB cap on organizations with three or fewer users.

    An additional 5TB per user can be added on top of that, with a maximum cap of 1,000TB per organization.

    New customers will be affected by this policy change immediately, as you'll see if you check the current pricing for Dropbox Advanced plans.


    The original article contains 354 words, the summary contains 173 words. Saved 51%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

149 comments