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Forum Discussion
adrian29630
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Why is my account out of space?
As seems to be the case these days with many "Apps" they want you to buy their product but don't deliver support and want to rely on "Communities". In other words free assistance from other users whi...
- 3 years ago
Hi adrian29630, you can leave the shared folder from your account, or remove your access to it completely, by following these steps.
It won't affect other users who are currently members of the shared folder.
Rich
Super User II
3 years ago
Harry Molyneux wrote:
If that's the case why does every member with access to that folder need to pay for it's storage separately?
Because every member has their own COPY of the folder in their own account which syncs back to all the other members, and anything in your account takes up space. You're not accessing a folder in someone else's account.
Harry Molyneux
3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Itâs not really their own unique copy, itâs the exact same folder.
It doesnât have to work that way, itâs just set up like that by Dropbox so they can charge users more. Itâs pretty obvious. Google Drive doesnât work that way and the functionality is the exact same.
It doesnât have to work that way, itâs just set up like that by Dropbox so they can charge users more. Itâs pretty obvious. Google Drive doesnât work that way and the functionality is the exact same.
- Rich3 years ago
Super User II
Harry Molyneux wrote:
Itâs not really their own unique copy, itâs the exact same folder.No, it's a unique copy for each user. You can even rename and move the shared folder elsewhere in your account, and it won't affect the other members while still syncing with their copies of the folder.
Sure, there's Dropbox's deduplication magic happening in the background so each unique file chunk (remember, files are stored in chunks, not complete files) is not duplicated on the back-end servers, but each user does have their own unique copy of the files in their account. If I make a change in a folder that is shared with me, that change is not seen instantly for all other members, which it would if I was editing the same copy as theirs. That edited file is synced to all of the other members of the share.
- Harry Molyneux3 years agoHelpful | Level 6What benefit is there to having it sync not in real time? And the ability rename a folder doesnât justify having to pay for the pricing. You could just create a shortcut to it and rename is whatever you like in another app like Google Drive.
Why are you defending this so adamantly? Do you work for Drop Box? - adrian296303 years agoHelpful | Level 5
That is my opinion on this as well. It seems to me that if Person A has an account with a folder in it and wants to share access or content of that folder with Person B there is no real reason why Person B should need to have or acquire limits equal to Person A.
In my case, Person A asked me to help to upload documents to his folder because there were a substantial number and he did not have time to do all of them. I did not need to view these, read them, or interact with them just upload them to a folder in Person A's Dropbox account.
As far as I was concerned I was not sharing the documents just having a shared access to the folder where the documents were required to be stored.
As others have stated it seems to me this idea of sharing resulting in the content being held in both "shared" accounts and therefore requiring both account holders to have the same level of storage is nothing more than a con.
- Rich3 years ago
Super User II
Harry Molyneux wrote:
What benefit is there to having it sync not in real time?It does sync in real-time but it's not instantaneous like it would be if it were just one folder that everyone could see. It takes time, albeit a very short amount of time, to sync from one location to the other.
Why are you defending this so adamantly? Do you work for Drop Box?I'm not defending anything. I'm providing information on how (and why) it works the way it does. No, I don't work for Dropbox. I'm a user, just like you.
- Rich3 years ago
Super User II
adrian29630 wrote:
I did not need to view these, read them, or interact with them just upload them to a folder in Person A's Dropbox account.
The owner of the folder could send you a File Request, which allows you to upload directly to someone else's account. You wouldn't be able to soo or interact with the files after you upload them, and they would never be in your own account.
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