☁️ Get 1TB of free cloud storage without giving your credit card

:computer_disk: Febox dumps 1TB in your lap the second you register

Febox hands you 1TB of cloud storage just for signing up.

No credit card. No trial ending in 3 days. Just 1TB.

Apps for PC and Android exist if you actually want to use this like a normal person.

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Not enough? Make another account. Then another. Nobody’s stopping you.


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There are no trials here, it is given out on a permanent basis. I have had 1 terabyte for over a year now, it is the same. Terabox

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It really works, I registered, installed the program on Windows and android , it didn’t ask for any trials, and there’s no information about them anywhere on the website, so it’s a great tool.


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You get a minus for deception because there are no trials and my screenshots below confirm this.

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All Files stored at Febbox are Public, no security to be secure and personal.

They are not publicly available, as the site has one application for Windows and Android, to share files you need to provide a link to them, which works for 7 days, and then becomes inactive, that’s all as in Terabox with the main difference that it is Not China


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Yes its working absolutely fine.

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We all see the “1TB Free” offer from FebBox and the temptation is real. Free storage is gold, especially for backups or sharing collections. However, before you start dumping your library or personal files there, I did a deep dive into their Terms of Service (ToS) and Privacy Policy.

If you care about anonymity and the longevity of your links, there are some major red flags you need to know.


:unlocked: 1. No Zero-Knowledge Encryption (They Are Watching)

Unlike providers like Mega or Filen, FebBox does not encrypt files client-side.

  • The Reality: Their ToS explicitly states they “access, store, and scan Your Stuff” for things like thumbnails and OCR.

  • The Risk: :eye: They have the keys. They can see exactly what files you are hosting. If you are storing cracked software or movies without a password-protected archive, their automated systems know exactly what it is.

:satellite_antenna: 2. Aggressive Tracking & Data Collection

From an OpSec perspective, their app and site are leaky.

  • Google Tokens: If you use “Login with Google,” they collect access tokens.

  • trackers: The Privacy Policy admits to using AdMob, Mintegral, and Firebase.

  • Logs: They log IP addresses, device IDs, and usage stats extensively.

  • The Verdict: :prohibited: Zero Anonymity. Do not rely on them to protect your identity if a legal request comes in.

:scroll: 3. The Public “Hit List” (Volatility Risk)

Most file hosts handle DMCA requests quietly. FebBox has a public “Infringement Publicity” page where they actually list the specific filenames and movies they have nuked.

  • Why this matters: They are actively demonstrating compliance to authorities to avoid being shut down.

  • The Risk: :chart_decreasing: High Volatility. Your links are likely to die faster here than on other hosts. Don’t use this for long-term archiving of sensitive content.

:balance_scale: 4. Jurisdictional Spaghetti

  • Company: Hong Kong (TopSpeed Network Limited)

  • Governing Law: California, USA :united_states:

  • Courts: Hong Kong :hong_kong_sar_china: This legal mess suggests that if the service gets seized or disappears (like Megaupload), your data is gone forever with no recourse.


:shield: OpSec Survival Guide (If you must use it)

If you still want to use that free 1TB for your “Linux ISOs” or collections, follow these strict rules to stay safe:

  1. :package: ALWAYS Archive & Password Protect: Never upload raw video files or executables. Use RAR/7z with a strong password and encrypted filenames. This stops their automated scanners from identifying the content immediately.

  2. :performing_arts: Use a Burner Account: Never link your main Google/Apple account. Use a temporary email or a dedicated burner email.

  3. :stop_sign: VPN is Mandatory: Since they log IPs aggressively, never upload or download without a VPN.

  4. :cross_mark: No Personal Data: Do not upload personal photos, documents, or backups. Assume everything on FebBox is public.

TL;DR: FebBox is okay for temporary junk files if you take precautions, but it is NOT a secure vault. Treat it like a public folder.

Stay safe out there.

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It’s not good for personal and sensitive files. Febbox ToS says following :

Your Stuff & Your Permissions

When you use our Services, you provide us with things like your files, content, messages, contacts, and so on (“Your Stuff”). Your Stuff is yours. These Terms don’t give us any rights to Your Stuff except for the limited rights that enable us to offer the Services.

We need your permission to do things like hosting Your Stuff, backing it up, and sharing it when you ask us to. Our Services also provide you with features like commenting, sharing, searching, image thumbnails, document previews, optical character recognition (OCR), easy sorting and organization, and personalization to help reduce busywork. To provide these and other features, FEB (FebBox) accesses, stores, and scans Your Stuff. You give us permission to do those things, and this permission extends to our affiliates and trusted third parties we work with.

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And now take and open Terabox details from the People’s Republic of China. You think you are absolutely confidential there, naive people. The same goes for Google drive. Despite the encryption, its contents can be viewed through scanners of the global internet index, so there is nothing to breed empty horror stories))

(https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Sx1JEUQNK3YvEfTFD1opcYctiWPr2YEV/view)
as for the ultra-reliable Google with encryption, the second way is to search Google drives by index through Google dork. I’ve heard about password and file leaks in this Google service. and Febox wasn’t even mentioned in the news about the leak.

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They’re worried about it as if they were going to store their crypto wallet data in the cloud. Don’t let them worry about it :rofl:

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Totally. My post wasn’t about demonizing one service over another, but rather a generic ‘heads-up’ to keep your eyes open. It’s all about situational awareness: knowing exactly what you’re uploading, where it’s going, and how to protect yourself while doing it.

Better to be a bit paranoid now than sorry later. I just wanted to make sure everyone knows the playground rules (and the risks) before jumping in. As long as you know what you’re doing, where, and how, you’re usually covering your ass. :smiling_face_with_sunglasses:

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hmmmm…. i think again…

What are these dates?