Development status Closed | ||
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Original author(s) Initial release August 14, 2008; 8 years ago (2008-08-14) Stable release Nadelhorn / September 30, 2014; 2 years ago (2014-09-30) Operating system |
Wuala /wɑːˈlɑː/ was a secure online file storage, file synchronization, versioning and backup service originally developed and run by Caleido Inc. It is now part of LaCie, which is in turn owned by Seagate Technology. The service stores files in data centres that are provided by Wuala in multiple European countries (France, Germany, Switzerland). An earlier version also supported distributed storage on other users' machines, however this feature has been dropped. On 17 August 2015 Wuala announced that it was discontinuing its service and that all stored data would be deleted on 15 November 2015. Wuala recommended a rival cloud storage startup, Tresorit, as an alternative to its remaining customers.
Contents
History
Most research and development occurred at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich.
14 August 2008
An "open beta"-java-applet, available from the website, could be run from a web browser.19 September 2008
The Wuala Webstart project was registered on SourceForge.net.26 October 2008
An Alpha release REST API, at a very early stage of development, supported HTTP GET requests for content that was either public, or shared through a keyed hyperlink.16 December 2008
The Uniform Resource Locator changed from http://wua.la/ to http://www.wuala.com/ and files that were public, or shared through a keyed hyperlink, were made accessible through web browsers.19 March 2009
LaCie announced a merger with Caleido AG. Wuala described the merger as being between Wuala and LaCie (not Caleido AG and LaCie).5 January 2010
Post-merger announcement of the first joint products.23 May 2011
All pro features - backup, sync, file versioning and time travel - are available for everyone at no cost28 September 2011
The "trade storage" feature was discontinued.11 June 2014
The storage plan was shifted to a paid-only service31 October 2014
Wuala announced that existing free-only storage would be terminated at the end of 2014 and customers wishing to save their data should migrate away or purchase a paid plan17 August 2015
Wuala announced that it would allow no further renewals or purchase of storage. The service will transition to read-only on 30 September 2015 and all stored data will be deleted on 15 November 2015Features
Any registered user can:
Registered and unregistered users can:
When a user adds a file to Wuala, or saves changes to a file that is served by Wuala, the user's local copy of file is:
Storage
Wuala offered free accounts that had 5 GB of storage for no charge. As of 11 June 2014 they shifted to a paid-only service. As of the end of 2014 they will no longer support any form of free-only storage, shifting entirely to a payment based usage model.
Users of joint products may start with greater amounts of storage for a limited period:
Additional storage may be bought. As of June 2014, the referral system was shut down due to the new paid-only policy.
For bought storage: prices range from 29 EUR/year for 20 GB to 999 EUR/year for 1 TB. Pricing changed in June 2014: The storage plan starts with 0.99 € per month (9 € per year) for 5 GB and ends at 159.90 € per Month (1799 € per year) for 2 TB of storage.
Trading
One of the distinguishing features of Wuala, the ability to trade local disk storage space against cloud storage, is no longer available.
Desktop application
The user interface offers most of the features that are normally associated with a file manager. Additional features come through integration.
A registered user can install the Java-based client application (SWT-GUI):
Wuala Webstart and web browsers
Through a web browser, on a computer that has Java installed:
If the computer is without Java, or if running of the class loader is prevented:
Non-graphical interfaces
Support for the following may be limited:
Security
According to Wuala's FAQ, the software uses AES-256 for encryption and RSA-2048 for key exchange and signatures. Keys are organized in a key management scheme called Cryptree.
According to the FAQ, Wuala employs full client-side encryption. All files and their metadata – most OS X metadata is not supported – get encrypted before they are uploaded. The encryption key is stored such that no one, not even LaCie that operates the service, can decrypt the stored files. The disadvantage of this is that Wuala has no password recovery and all data processing needs to be done in the client (for example creating a search index). The advantage is significantly improved privacy.
Since the source code to Wuala has not been released, it is difficult to ensure that the software does what it states it does (including proper client-side encryption). Also, updates are pushed automatically to the client machine. These facts mean that users of Wuala are not safe from possible backdoors in code.