

- #KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER INSTALL#
- #KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER PASSWORD#
- #KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER DOWNLOAD#
Interesting findings include forensic artifacts, which could be useful to investigators in understanding user activity and attribution. Moreover, locations within the device that stores call logs, SMS messages, images, and videos are reported. The findings include analysis of artifacts that could impact user privacy and data security, organization structure of file storage, app storage, OS, etc. Therefore, in this paper, the first forensic analysis of the PinePhone device with Ubuntu Touch OS is performed using Autopsy, an open source tool, to establish a framework that can be used to examine and analyze devices running the Ubuntu Touch OS. This results in potentially flawed methodologies being used before any testing can occur and contributes to the backlog of devices that need to be processed. There is little research behind both the device and OS on what methodology an investigator should follow to reliably and accurately extract data. Ubuntu Touch is one of these OSes and is currently being developed for deployment on the PinePhone. These new devices are sometimes also shipped with OSes that are developed by open source communities and are otherwise never seen by investigators. One such device is the PinePhone from Pine Microsystems (Pine64). These new devices introduce new challenges for mobile forensic investigators as these devices end up becoming pertinent evidence during an investigation. Its like doing an include('database.db') note lack of url because its a local file.New smartphones made by small companies enter the technology market everyday. There are problems with running a webdav server, ignore all the security issues, corporate firewalls, proxy servers and other security tools block varius HTTP commands and I have seen a very technical PHP based workaround but really it cant be this hard to simply ask the web app to read the file next to it. The idea a webdav server is required for this is shocking. The database file could for example sit in the same folder as the keeweb index.html, if wanted (ok not secure but).
#KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER PASSWORD#
Why cant keeweb do a local (php) file_get_contents('database.dbk') of the password database, so the database ip traffic never leaves the server. I still dont think Antelle understands whats being asked for.Īll thats being asked and something I am interested in is and technically nothing to so with yunohost in purly a technical sense. Yunohost is for me the best way to make decentralised cloud popular.īy the way, I open the same issue on the github of keeweb for yunohost so if you want to discuss about it with the dev, it's here : YunoHost-Apps/keeweb_ynh#7 (comment)
#KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER INSTALL#
The little geeky of the family (like me) can easily install it and all the family can enjoy it. It is so far the easiest/friendliest way to self-host a cloud on a rasp at home.

Maybe if you don't know yunohost, you should give it a try.
#KEEWEB DROPBOX SELECT FOLDER DOWNLOAD#
Maybe I'm not geek enough and I want something difficult but in my mind, if I can download the file in my computer and then later from an other browser I can upload it, it should not be difficult to add an option to save the file locally on the server and open it locally from the folder (and make it automatic). Keeweb yunohost should store that file automatically in a folder on the server and open it automatically (with the password) when a user open the app. From other computer, you need to open the file (that no normal person would have previously downloaded or stored on whatever else server). This is happening today but only with oneself's browser. I just would like the file to be stored automatically in the yunohost-user's folder, and that the usage become as easy as : I login to yunohost, I click on th tile of keeweb app, I enter the password to access my keeweb data and I can copy/paste password to login whatever I need to login. If I say webdav to them they'll look at me very weird.

I might be a geek (I don't know if being able to install yunohost is enough) but my father and mother who are going to use yunohost aren't.
