Google Unofficially Announces GDrive By Leaked Code 342
An anonymous reader writes "Google has unofficially announced the GDrive by source code. In an in-direct way, Google has publicly advertised the new, much-anticipated online storage drive called the GDrive. If you take a look at the source code of some javascript within the Google Pack, you will clearly see the GDrive referenced. The code categorizes the GDrive as an 'Online file backup and storage' device. It also provides the following descriptions; 'GDrive provides reliable storage for all of your files, including photos, music and documents' and 'GDrive allows you to access your files from anywhere, anytime, and from any device — be it from your desktop, web browser or cellular phone.'"
Re:Obvious (Score:4, Interesting)
If by "closer to official" you mean "closer to Beta" which for Google means "yeah, it's official, we just cannot claim it's 100% without flaw"
See also: GMail... still in BETA!
gdrive.com (Score:4, Interesting)
Taken right now by a web design firm. Curious how long they stay there for.
Re:Saturated (Score:4, Interesting)
From what I've read, you'll be able to map it like another drive on your computer, just drag and drop files. Unlike a slow web interface with other products, you can very quickly access your files. There will be tons of storage, and it will be completely free with no nags to upgrade to a premium service.
Otherwise, exactly like this should have been handled by everyone else from day 1.
How do they make money from this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure this is very useful, but whats in it for Google?
Ads and Encryption (Score:3, Interesting)
How will they make money with this service? Will they charge a subscription fee or will it be supported via ads like most of their services? If it's going to be ad-supported, that probably means encrypted files will not be permitted [Ever try to send a fully encrypted RAR file through GMail? You can't.], which doesn't sit too well with me.
Re:Sounds Good. (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you have any reason to suggest that Google is handing over data to the RIAA when Google has historically fought to protect the privacy of its users?
Furthermore, even if the RIAA saw my massive MP3 collection, I do have CDs to justify most of it, and I'm not distributing copies to other people. They don't have anything on me.
not announced - CANCELLED (Score:1, Interesting)
there is no announcement of any kind because this is a project from 2007 [slashdot.org] that has been cancelled. Whatever code you found in Google Pack is also from that time.
Re:Ads and Encryption (Score:2, Interesting)
Try emailing a RAR files that's encrypted in such a manner that filenames aren't visible. It won't let you.
Re:Yeah, Right. (Score:3, Interesting)
Astroturfers don't clearly identify sources of possible bias. I'm biased cause I work at Google and I like working at Google. I'll tell you that because I'm honest about my biases.
I'm also well-informed, and though I can't tell you very much of what I know, I will tell you that Google tries* to do the right thing, including act as an advocate for user privacy.
* "tries" is a very carefully chosen word here.
Great for Rapidshare users, I guess (Score:3, Interesting)
I can see this becoming a popular filesharing tool; I can see myself and some online friends sharing a google account for the sake of making a free high-speed dump to replace private FTP sites, Rapidshare links etc.
Hm (Score:2, Interesting)
I can give all my data to be perused by google's advertising spider and handed over to the government if the DO so much sneezes in Google's direction...
Or for about two hundred fifty bucks I can pop a couple 1TB hard drives in an old linux box and have my own remotely accessible RAID server.
Decisions, decisions...