This was posted 10 years 11 months 19 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Tresorit 50% off All Plans

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What is Tresorit?

There are a ton of online syncing and storage services, but not all of them locally encrypt your data for higher security. Tresorit is a new Dropbox alternative with client-side encryption. Tresorit's biggest selling point is the strong security. Your files and folders are encrypted before they're uploaded to the cloud

To get technical about it:

Files are encrypted with AES-256 before being uploaded to the cloud. Additional security is provided before upload by HMAC message authentication codes applied on SHA-512 hashes. Encrypted files are uploaded to the cloud using TLS-protected channels.

If you don't like having your privacy invaded, you must be a criminal! Since I live in a convict country I feel obliged to use this.

Discounted plans per month (USD):
*100GB / $6.49 ($12.99)
*200GB / $12.99 ($25.99)
*500GB / $32.49 ($64.99)
*1000GB / $64.99 ($129.99)

Shameless referral link bonus 5GB(?)
https://register.tresorit.com/download?mode=1&ref=1PKOfP
I'll rotate it or put up an editable doc if the deal is popular.

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closed Comments

  • +2

    What is Tresorit?

    An anagram for Terorist…

    • It's supposed to be prounounced as "Treasure It" but that works too..

      New users note..

      there is no password recovery facility for Tresorit as is the case for other websites — if you forget your password, you're effectively locked out of your account and the only recourse is to re-create your account and have the Tresorit support team delete your old one.

      https://support.tresorit.com/entries/22813798-Lost-password

      Don't lose your password — you will lose your cloud data (local remains untouched) and you'll have to re-upload again.

  • +1

    Looks like life-time discount rather than once off 50%? Too bad there's not yet a Linux client.

    Alternatively there's also duplicity that uses GnuPG to sign / encrypt your backup before uploading them, which can be Amazon S3 or any rsync-based services.

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