Sharing files over the internet is nothing new, but the process has evolved since the halcyon days of finicky FTP servers and dodgy P2P programs. Now, it’s easy to send large files with a simple web ...
An organization that sends large files from the subscriber to designated parties. Offering free and paid plans based on the number and size of files transferred per month, file transfer services such ...
At TNW, we often need to send photos and video to our colleagues for our stories. While Slack is an effective tool if we want to send across a screenshot or two, it’s better to use a filesharing ...
Firefox Send, Mozilla’s free, encrypted file-transfer service, is officially launching to the public today following its debut as a “Test Pilot” experiment back in August 2017. The service allows web ...
Synology has this week announced the availability of a new secure cloud file transfer service designed for businesses and teams, enabling them to securely transfer documents between businesses, ...
Mozilla has its own free online file-sharing service and it is now available to everyone. Called Firefox Send, the platform originally launched in 2017 as an experimental service under Firefox Test ...
Mozilla has made privacy Firefox's calling card, while lambasting companies it believes don't meet the bar on security. Its latest update to its web browser, an end-to-end encrypted file transfer ...
More than 300 billion e-mails are exchanged worldwide every day. These e-mails are processed by various routers and servers along the way, and are finally stored on the recipient's service provider's ...
Progress Software Corp. has disclosed a critical vulnerability in its MOVEit service, which organizations use to share files with one another. The development comes less than a year after a ransomware ...
File-sharing company WeTransfer has acquired the Paper and Paste creative apps from FiftyThree. FiftyThree co-founder Georg Petschnigg. Founded in 2011, New York City-based FiftyThree was known for ...
There’s no such thing as too many ways to get IT stuff done. If you only have one way, then you are at the mercy of that method becoming obsolete or not being interoperable with the latest standards.