When I want full encryption, I tend to use MEGAsync for stuff that could be dynamically changing, or Telegram for encryption of general and large file storage (e.g., movies collections. The user has to open them with the appropriate key in order to read/write to them, or search them (when closed, these encrypted objects become invisible to searches). The user can encrypt whole Notebooks, or just some subsections/pages in the Notebooks. I have most of them in the Cloud now, so I am usually working on a cached copy of a Notebook which is held locally on the client device and changes to it are regularly mirrored up incrementally as they occur, to the primary copy in the Cloud. ![]() The user can have several OneNote Notebooks open at the same time, and they could be variously held either on the client device or in the Cloud (on OneDrive). One of my main PIMs (Personal Information Managers) is OneNote. I have my User ID folders synced to OneDrive by default, so I can theoretically go to another Windows PC and get the same (current) data in those folders on whatever client I am using, but I don't really need encryption for those. ![]() (That's also a good way to minimise storage utilisation.) Therefore, if I want to truly protect my stored data on OneDrive or Gdrive, I parcel it in an encrypted. So, it's caveat emptor and one need have no illusions about that. B: CHANGE the item by attaching a non-removable flag to it (e.g., licenced/copyrighted material that bore no copyright when it was given to you) - in the case of a flag, the flag is permanent/persistent and you can never get your original file back in its original state.īy definition, a backup site needs to be trusted, and one cannot trust any site that does the above (QED).One then enters a world of pain trying to restore the situation, which can only be done by detailed analysis and comparison of the primary and cached copies of the Notebook being synced. When this happens it discombobulates the syncing for the entire Notebook, leaving the Notebook "unsyncable". A: delete bits of your files - e.g., suspected virus in a file attached to a OneNote document page that the client PC's Windows Defender didn't spot. ![]() When one saves stuff to either OneDrive or Google Drive, both services examine the data and will sometimes:
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