


These Terms do not grant us any rights to your stuff or intellectual property except for the limited rights that are needed to run the Services, as explained below." We don't claim any ownership to any of it. " Your Stuff & Your Privacy: By using our Services you provide us with information, files, and folders that you submit to Dropbox (together, "your stuff"). While Google needed no advertising to drum up support, what may hold back uptake is that as per the company's terms and conditions, the rights to the files you upload to Google Drive will be passed on to the search giant.Ī quick analysis of Google's terms of service shows how far the search company goes in 'owning' your files, and how it can do anything it wants with them.īut there is a small catch. Within hours of Google launching its new online storage service, the terms and service have come under heavy fire by the wider community for how it handles users' copyright and intellectual property rights.Īfter Dropbox and Microsoft's SkyDrive - the two most popular online storage services on the web - Google was late to the party by a number of years.
