Originally this post was titled 10 Alternatives to MegaUpload , but two of my alternatives Uploaded. In its place appeared a red banner alerting users of the disabled sharing service:. Our service can only be used to upload and retrieve files that you have uploaded personally.
With the announcement of the service changes, finding a good alertnative file-sharing service become that much more important. If you have MegaUpload blues, take comfort; Rapidshare is incredibly similar to our banned buddy. Rapidshare offers users unlimited disk space with unlimited size of uploads! The only downside of a free account is that files are deleted over a period of time, but if you upgrade to Pro get deleted after a certain period of time.
If you want to use this as a cloud storage service, you can upgrade your account to. Similar to Rapidshare, Mediafire offers free users unlimited storage files, with files being deleted after a specified time period. However unlike Rapidshare, free MediaFire users are limited to 2GB upload file size upgrading to a Pro account increases their one-time max upload size to 4GB.
Dropbox Boasting 45 million users, Dropbox is a clear front runner. The popular cloud storage service offers users a 2 GB of free storage.
Users can share files by creating a public folder, with direct links, or by inviting a user through email to join a folder. The files can be shared with anyone using your public folder or other Dropbox users via email invitations.
Box is a cloud storage service that offers free users a 25 MB storage limit. Storage can be increased with a Pro account but the max available storage is 5 GB. VentureBeat Homepage. Did you miss a session from the Future of Work Summit? Head over to our Future of Work Summit on-demand library to stream. As more details come to light in the much-publicized Megaupload case , other file-sharing sites around the web are shutting their doors in fear that they could be targeted next by the U.
Department of Justice. Over the weekend, popular Megaupload alternatives FileSonic and FileServe completely turned off the ability to share files with other people. And another well-trafficked site, Uploaded. Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom and several other Megaupload employees were arrested after being named in a page indictment issued Thursday by the DOJ.
Take a look:. Hong Kong-based BayFiles may be one of the file-sharing sites that attracts government scrutiny based on pedigree alone. The site was created by two of the founders of notorious torrent website The Pirate Bay , which said two weeks ago it would gradually stop serving torrent files because of sustained heat.
Cyprus-based DepositFiles has a bare bones design, but the site has pretty incredible sharing capabilities available for free. You can upload and share files up to MB in size without registration, and if you do register, you can upload up to 2GB files for free.
The site also offers a Gold membership that allows you download with multiple connections, no waiting time for downloads and no advertising. Having people pay for higher quality download connections to large files is one of the things that got Megaupload in trouble.
Divx Stage is one of the shadiest looking sites on this list, without question. The site lets you upload up to 1GB files and features tons of TV shows and movies to watch for free. HulkShare is a strange beast of a file-sharing service that walks the line between promoting artists and enabling those to spread copyrighted music illegally. The service offers unlimited file storage, although you're limited to uploading files no larger than MB at a time with free accounts.
Your files only stay active for a short time usually 30 days , but for even though it has its limitations, MediaFire doesn't force you to queue up to download files, doesn't require an account to upload or download files, and doesn't keep you from downloading multiple files simultaneously. YouSendIt has been around for a long time, and has grown from offering users a fast way to send one another large files without killing each other's inboxes to an enterprise tool where businesses let employees drop documents to securely share with people outside of their organizations.
You can still sign up and use the service for free however—free users have to deal with ads, but they get 2GB of storage and can upload files no larger than 50MB. Once uploaded, you can share them with anyone, effectively "email" your files to other people by attaching the YouSendIt link in your email signature, upload or download files from mobile devices, and more.
Minus started off as an image sharing service, but quickly bloomed into a richly featured file sharing service. You can drag and drop any file to upload it to Minus, and send a short link to your friends so they can view it on the web, download it, or even open it and collaborate with you on it before sending it back.
Sign up for an account and you get 50GB of storage, and you can upload files up to 2GB, share any of them, and keep them indefinitely without worrying they'll be deleted.
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