Dropbox Launches Instant File Previews And Virtual Photo Album Sharing

Dropbox Photo SHaringToday Dropbox launched the ability to instantly preview any file you’ve saved so you don’t have to download it to know what it is. It also launched a photos tab for the web to make it easy to view and share photos you’ve uploaded. Product Manager Chris Beckmann explained “Both are related to a shift that we’re seeing that’s underway at Dropbox from thinking about things as files to thinking about things as users’ content.”

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Dropbox Acquires Snapjoy And Puts Photos Into Its Focus

snapjoylogoLess than one week after Dropbox acqui-hired Audiogalaxy to beef up its cloud music ambitions, today comes news of another acquisition, this time focused on another form of media, photos: the cloud-storage giant is buying Snapjoy — like Dropbox, a Y Combinator-alum — which lets users aggregate, archive and view all of their digital photos from their cameras, phones and popular apps like Flickr, Instagram and Picasa, and then view them online or via an iOS app.

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Soleio, Veteran Facebook Designer Behind The Like Button, Joins Dropbox Team

Soleio DropboxSoleio Cuervo styled the social layer as one of Facebook’s first designers. Now he’s off to define the data layer, as this afternoon he’ll announce he’s going to work for Dropbox. Known by just his first name, Soleio designed the Like button, but left Facebook a year ago once its chrome solidified. Today he returns to startup-land to tackle challenges at Dropbox as it soars past 100 million users.

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Dropbox Reports User Accounts Were Hijacked, Adds New Security Features

dropbox-logoSeveral weeks ago, reports started to trickle out that a number of Dropbox users were under attack from spam. Since then, Dropbox has been investigating those attacks (with some help from a third-party) and today gave the first update on the progress, saying that some accounts were indeed accessed by hackers, but that it is now adding two-factor authentication and other security features to prevent further problems.

For some background: On July 17th, a number of Dropbox users begun noticing an increase in the level spam attacking their accounts. As Sarah reported at the time, the red flag appeared when users begun reporting that the email accounts receiving spam were in fact only tied to their Dropbox accounts, which indicated that the address leak had come from Dropbox itself. Many of those reports came from the company’s international users, including Germany, the U.K. and the Netherlands.

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