
The FBI has shut down file-sharing web site Megaupload, arrested its executives, and called the site an “international organised criminal enterprise“. Even though there’s little doubt that Megaupload was host to some copyrighted material, it was also a great way to upload and share large files, like photo archives and video, and send them to friends without worrying about hosting, Dropbox quotas or overloaded inboxes. Now that it’s gone, here are some other great sites that let you share large files effortlessly.
The future is unclear for Megaupload, and while the people behind the service vow they’re innocent and that they’ll fight to come back, it’s likely that even if the site returns it won’t be the same Megaupload we all know today. Thankfully there are plenty of alternatives if you need to move large files from one computer to another.
Photo remixed from an original by Pavels Hotulevs/Shutterstock.
RapidShare

With Megaupload down, RapidShare is your next natural alternative as a site that allows you to upload large files and send your friends a link to download them. You’ll need to sign up for an account to use RapidShare, but once you do, you can upload files as large as you like and keep them stored as long as you like. Once your files are uploaded, you’ll get a short URL you can send to friends so they can download the file from another computer, or that you can use to re-downlaod the file on a different system. If you’re willing to pay for a RapidPro membership (priced at $US13/month or $US130/yea), your uploaded files will never expire, your file storage and your file transfers are encrypted, and you never have to wait for downloads to start.
MediaFire

MediaFire promises to make file uploads and sharing dead simple, as in drag-and-drop simple. The service offers unlimited file storage, although you’re limited to uploading files no larger than 200MB at a time (with free accounts). Your files only stay active for a short time (usually 30 days). Despite that limitation, MediaFire doesn’t force you to queue up to download files, doesn’t require an account to upload or downlaod files, and doesn’t keep you from downloading multiple files simultaneously. If you sign up for a MediaFire Pro account ($US9/month), you can upload files up to 2GB each, store them as long as you want without worrying they’ll expire, go ad-free, and even let other users drop files into your account for you to review later.
YouSendIt

YouSendIt has been around for a long time, and has grown from offering users a fast way to send one another large files without killing each other’s inboxes to an enterprise tool where businesses let employees drop documents to securely share with people outside of their organisations. You can still sign up and use the service for free however — free users have to deal with ads, but they get 2GB of storage (individual files can’t be larger than 50MB). Once uploaded, you can share them with anyone, effectively “email” your files to other people by attaching the YouSendIt link in your email signature, upload or download files from mobile devices, and more. Shell out $US10/month or $US50/year for YouSendIt Pro, and your storage is bumped up to 5GB and uploads to 2GB each. Spend $US15/month or $US149/year for Pro Plus to get unlimited storage and unlimited upload sizes, as well as other advanced tracking and file management features.
Minus

Minus started off as an image sharing service, but quickly bloomed into a richly featured file-sharing service. You can drag and drop any file to upload it to Minus, and send a short link to your friends so they can view it on the web, download it, or even open it and collaborate with you on it before sending it back. Sign up for an account and you get 50GB of storage, and you can upload files up to 2GB, share any of them, and keep them indefinitely without worrying they’ll be deleted. Minus users also get the benefit of mobile apps and browser extensions to make sharing and downloading easy.
Dropbox And Alternatives

While services like Dropbox, SugarSync, and Windows Live Mesh don’t have the same hands-off, “upload it and forget it” approach that Megaupload and similar web apps have, they all offer some ability to sync a cloud storage account with a folder or set of files on your computer, and then quickly share those synchronised files with someone else. Dropbox lets you use your public folder to share files and your photos folder to share galleries, for example. While none of the services offer you unlimited file storage or uploads the way some webapps do, you can always follow our guide to maximising your Dropbox space to give it a boost.
In addition to these services, you can always upload your files to sites like Multiupload, Gazup, and Uplaoding.to, which send your file to multiple file sharing hosts and return a single link that you or a friend can use to download from one or any of them.
Republished from Lifehacker.


















Luke
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 1:01 PMSo, within a short while, all these will be closed down as well.
So you can pretty much say goodbye to all these sites.
Patrick
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 1:12 PMSo what makes megaupload different? I use yousendit for work all the time and doubt they are as rich as these megaupload guys. What am i missing here, some more detail in these stories would be really useful.
Ozoneocean
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 1:42 PMNo, with the exception of rapidshare, these sites are much more heavily centred around legitimate use.
Megaupload and its various services allowed not only file upload, but things like video streaming of copyrighted material. by contrast these sites only allow storage and retrieval of files. And, again with the exception of Rapidshare, they don’t really lend themselves to the same widely open sharing system that made megaupload what it was.
Luke
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 2:40 PMOk, i suppose that’s fair enough but would the American Government and the FBI see it the same way?
I wouldnt be surprised if they somehow think that filesharing automatically means that there are copyrighted material.
Richard
Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 12:23 AMI imagine that yes, they would see it that way.
The internet is based on the ability to store files on servers…websites require it to host content after all. The ability to remotely host a file isn’t grounds for a termination of a service, promoting and benefiting from illegal use while making no attempt to legitimise the service is.
Drongo
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 4:59 PMFiledropper is another good one. Don’t need to sign up. Couldn’t be easier.
Liam
Friday, January 20, 2012 at 7:36 PMThey arent real alternatives. Rapidshare is the only one close and it is one of the worse of them all. Fileserv, filesonic are better alternatives.
The Joker
Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 2:44 PMSo how the hell do people with legitimate files get them back, eg. photos etc.