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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by yogurtwrong@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Hi. I am currently using google drive mounted with rsync (encrypted) to stream files over my VPS since my VPS provider charges a lot for extra storage compared to google. I have offline backups of the said data at home

I currently have a 100GB google drive plan and it's working suprisingly great. Also it's cheap in my country due to regional pricing

Now, as I learned, Google keeps your files for 2 years after you cancel your extra storage subscription. It also doesn't allow you to upload anything which locks up Gmail but that doesn't matter if it's an alt account. So, can I just create an alt account, buy a 1 month subscription, upload everything, cancel it, then read it using rclone? Does Google restrict api access (for rclone) on drives with expired subscriptions?

Yeah I know I'm stretching this a bit too far but I just wanna know

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[-] yogurtwrong@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Well, my VPS is used mainly by my friends for Minecraft servers, collaboration, file sharing, streaming and pretty much everything cloud related

Most of them live in Istanbul and my VPS provider is one of the most reliable and affordable providers located in Istanbul.

Unfortunately, Hertzner doesn't work for me because their prices are astronomical for me compared to Google's regional pricing for Turkey (40TL/mo = 1.1USD/mo for 2TB)

I just wanna exploit the service as much as possible since I just don't rely on them. Electricity prices are too high for homelab but maybe I could set up a solar powered server if I save a little (I'm a student, I don't have much money, but I like the hobby)

I'll probably try accessing cancelled drive account with rclone and find out if it's possible

[-] tomcatt360@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 months ago

Let us know how it goes-for Science!

[-] yogurtwrong@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

I made a 100GB alt account and uploaded 25GB of files through an encrypted mount. We'll see what happens when I cancel it tomorrow

[-] solrize@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

1.1 USD/mo for 2TB is basically a giveaway or free plan, i.e. you're the product not the customer. So I'd be suspicious. How much storage are you looking for? Hetzner unfortunately jumps from 3.2 euro/1TB to 11 euro/5TB. So 2TB is kind of a bad spot on that scale. But if google drive is working for you and your stuff is encrypted, why not keep it?

[-] yogurtwrong@lemmy.world 6 points 2 months ago

Yup I know I am the product. That's why we are encrypting everything with AES256 before upload using rclone's crypt remote

I just don't trust any cloud provider tbh. Performance hit from AES256 is very insignificant and it provides solid privacy regardless of provider. Might as well get the cheap one

Possibility of Google keeping API access up after cancellation is why I asked this question. To learn what happens when to rclone Google drive mount after an expiration

[-] solrize@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I wouldn't count on google drive doing anything in particular after expiration, unless that is expressly part of the product description. Just because you can observe it happening now doesn't mean you can expect it to keep happening. For that matter, Google cancels products all the time. So I wouldn't even rely on the paid plan not being withdrawn at some inconvenient moment. If you really want to use it, then best strategy is probably use it as long as it lasts, but have some plan B in mind if it goes away.

Oneprovider.com shows lots of offers in Istanbul, though servers are expensive there compared to a place like Hetzner:

https://oneprovider.com/search?&cities[]=62&price=0&price_max=9999999999999999&price_any=0

[-] BearOfaTime@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago

The other cost to home lab serving lots of data is internet limits.

My internet will throttle after X terabytes (I forget the limit), whether upstream or down, and of course upload is slower.

It's like playing a game of tetris with costs, performance, stability, reliability, flexibility, privacy, security, and personal effort.

I'm not saying don't have a home lab, just that there are things to consider. It's worth the effort for me, though I'm working to move some things to cloud storage (e.g. Hetzner/Storj.io) and a VPS to get some of the bandwidth off my connection, and remove my home internet as a bottleneck or failure point.

this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2024
27 points (100.0% liked)

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