What Frank and Leo said.
You just can't beat the low cost, reliability and security of operating your own FTP/HTTP server. You don't have to worry about your stuff "disappearing" suddenly because some lawyer decided they didn't like what you were doing. Plus you don't have Google and their bed-buddies in the N$A to contend with, because Google.
You could get a server going for peanuts with an old junk laptop (or maybe that old beater Pentium IV collecting dust in the back corner of the booth?), Debian (or Net-BSD) and Apache (or NGNIX) and do exactly the kind of thing you're wanting to do, no corporate-owned hosting services necessary. Biggest problem you have to worry about is being on a dynamic IP system and your IP number changing, unless your ISP has a static IP option like mine does (Centurycrap), which makes it much easier to hang a server from.
Of course if push really came to shove, and it absolutely has to get there, there's always the old standby Sneakernet fallback: sending physical disks to your recipient through overnight express post. It *has* been done.
You just can't beat the low cost, reliability and security of operating your own FTP/HTTP server. You don't have to worry about your stuff "disappearing" suddenly because some lawyer decided they didn't like what you were doing. Plus you don't have Google and their bed-buddies in the N$A to contend with, because Google.
You could get a server going for peanuts with an old junk laptop (or maybe that old beater Pentium IV collecting dust in the back corner of the booth?), Debian (or Net-BSD) and Apache (or NGNIX) and do exactly the kind of thing you're wanting to do, no corporate-owned hosting services necessary. Biggest problem you have to worry about is being on a dynamic IP system and your IP number changing, unless your ISP has a static IP option like mine does (Centurycrap), which makes it much easier to hang a server from.
Of course if push really came to shove, and it absolutely has to get there, there's always the old standby Sneakernet fallback: sending physical disks to your recipient through overnight express post. It *has* been done.
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