Dropbox has made the cloud a reality for everyone, even, possibly, our grandma. While before the technology was discussed among service providers, tech workers, and tech enthusiasts, now your neighbors and relatives know how it works. But with that newness and widespread adoption of the cloud by everyday users comes a big security risk.
For months, Dropbox users were waiting, and finally, they can download a beta of the desktop app that operates natively on Apple’s Arm-based processors. Users
However, there's a catch: the app is invite-only for now. While the general public can download and install it onto their devices, no one can use it without being granted access (presumably a beta key of some kind).
The good news is that folks who had more than three devices attached to their account before March 2019 will be spared from the three-device limit.
Absolutely security is a big concern as everyday tons of data is shared by Dropbox.
Me. All my Dropbox files are in an encrypted .Zip