nzherald.co.nz

Pat Pilcher: Mega first impressions

By Pat Pilcher
8:00 AM Monday Jan 21, 2013
Kim Dotcom at yesterday's official launch of his new mega file storage service. Photo / Richard Robinson.

Kim Dotcom at yesterday's official launch of his new mega file storage service. Photo / Richard Robinson.

Now that Kim Dotcom's new file storage venture, Mega has officially launched, I took the opportunity to check it out, and came away quietly impressed.

Mega is essentially a giant online file storage service that makes use of some heavy duty encryption that uses patterns in your typing keystrokes and mouse activity used to generate a random encryption key, making it very hard to break.

The upshot of all this jargon is that Mega's system administrators (and anyone else not in possession of the encryption key which only you should have) are pretty much unable to see what files are being stored.

This mightn't sound like a big deal, but trust me it makes all the difference. Whilst Mega's terms and conditions say that Mega may have to co-operate with law enforcement agencies should they demand access to data being stored on Mega, all the copyright cops will be able to access is a bunch of scrambled data, meaning they'll have no way of knowing if the data they have been given access to is an illicit copy of a Hollywood blockbuster or your kid's school project.

The significance of this cannot be overstated. Whilst other online services such as Google or DropBox can be forced to hand over data yet if the authorities want Kim Dotcom and Mega to hand over data all they'll get is an indecipherable mess of encrypted nonsense which from a legal perspective is likely to be pretty much useless to them.

Whilst it is almost too easy to label Mega as a haven for pirates wanting to store copyrighted materials, the very fact that Mega is operating in a massively redundant data centre with multiple backups for everything makes it ideal for backing up important and irreplaceable data such as all those digital photos you've got scattered around the house on CDs, memory cards, external hard drives and PCs.

If the unthinkable were to happen and your house was to burn down, be destroyed in a quake or by invaders from Mars, you can at least take a measure of comfort in knowing that your family photos, scanned copies of important documents etc. are all safely stored online via mega.

In use Mega will be immediately familiar to anyone who has transferred files using Windows Explorer or similar, thanks to the Mega file manager. With the file manager you can create folders, upload files, or, should you need to, you can also delete files you no longer want to store.

Uploading files is as easy as clicking the upload files button on the mega site and then choosing which file you want to upload . With a decent broadband connection, uploads proved to be pretty zippy and I transferred a pile of digital photos in under 30 minutes.

Mega offers 50GB of storage for free and then three separately priced storage options which are:

Pro 1
500Gb storage
1Tb Bandwidth
Euro 9.99 per month

Pro 2
2Tb Storage
4Tb Bandwidth
Euro 19.95 per month

Pro 3
4Tb Storage
8Tb Bandwidth
Euro 29.95 per month

By Pat Pilcher
richard Wallace (United States) | 11:11AM Monday, 21 Jan 2013
We are all fully aware of how the NZ Governement will lie with the USA Government. I had false charges laid against me now 5 years and they were dropped.

I know what Kim Dotcom has been through and I want to see him win his case against the Americans and also get everything back that belongs to him. What Kim has exposed to the normal person on the street, they may or may not believe it, but there is a serious use of abuse of power from government officials and the police. The police are also. Kim you have done a great great. I am watching very closely.
Linda W () | 11:11AM Monday, 21 Jan 2013
Time NZ got that other cable, so Kimbo can give us all free internet!
XPD (Rodney) | 11:12AM Monday, 21 Jan 2013
Can you give more detail on your file transfers... ie: your line rate, the amount of data you shifted, and the speeds you were getting from Mega. Just saying it was zippy means stuff all really.... my 56k modem was zippy back in the day.
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