I find myself often having to transfer a random files from another person’s device to mine. Existing file sharing solutions aren’t exactly ideal because they either require me to remember a very long URL (file shares), or requiring me to log in on others’ device (cloud). I’m wondering if there’s a program where anyone can upload files, but can only be viewed and downloaded from the server by authenticated users. I understand it’s not wise to accept files from unauthenticated users, but it would be so damn convenient. If there isn’t one, I suppose that would be my next project.
- What’s the context in which you’re needing to share files? - My first thought is host your own FTP server and send people credentials to log into it with and upload. - I am a teaching assistant, and occasionally people ask me why their code isn’t working. I take it to my device so they can continue their work whilst I figure out the issue. I want to minimise the uploading complexity, and the time it takes to upload one. - If it’s code, would a private pastebin work for you? 
- Maybe Gitolite if it’s for code? 
- Is a server a requirement? I haven’t tried myself but localsend (p2p) comes to mind. - It would be desirable, as I don’t have to be prepared whenever someone starts sending a file, but I suppose I can live without it. Thank you for the suggestion! 
 
- If you’re on the same network, take a look at snapdrop. It’s basically cross platform AirDrop. - Maybe take a look at this fork: pairdrop 
- “Snapdrop is now LimeWire”. I didn’t even know LimeWire still existed. 
- Looks like the project is dead… - I’m sure there’s a decent fork. Read the code; there’s not much to it! 
 
 
 
 
- NextCloud allows you to share a folder but for upload only. 
- There’s PairDrop. It might have what you need. It’s for transferring files rather than uploading and then downloading later. You could get creative with authentication. Maybe put files in an encrypted archive file. - I’ll have to see if it works in my environment, but otherwise it looks cool! Thank you. - Certainly! - I’ve never used this one, but it could also work for you. 
 
 
- You could get around with a normal file share service (assuming you already are using one) via tinyurl or similar redirect. I don’t know how much the free services track you or if they have other security implications, but I have couple of domains laying around and it would be pretty trivial to just create HTTP redirect from “class-a.up.mydomain.foo” to my nextcloud upload link. - I honestly did not know Nextcloud allowed uploads without login. I definitely need to check that out. 
 
- While I’m sure there’s a pre-canned tool out there for you, if you have basic software experience (which you seem to), this is one of those times where it’s usually most efficient to hack together a dumb CGI script and call it a day. - This prompt should get you most of the way there, using your llm of choice: - Write a minimalist cgi script to help upload files to a server. Upon a GET request, serve a light page with a centered form that takes in a file and a submission code. Submission codes will be stored on individual lines of a plaintext file. Adding new codes to this file is out of scope - but the codes will be 8-char hex strings (do validate that submission strings are not empty!). The script should accept the submission as a POST, and save the file to an upload dir if the submission code is valid. - Vet the output, harden as needed, setup a systemd service to serve with busybox httpd, and optionally reverse-proxy. If you’ve done this sorta thing before, you can probably knock it out in a half hour. 
- Firefox Send is open source, even though the public service is no longer offered. - Here are some public instances and instructions for self hosting: https://github.com/timvisee/send-instances/tree/master?tab=readme-ov-file 
- I use https://file.pizza. It’s open source and has password protection options and everything. 
- I really like using Gokapi for this, like your own file paste bin to throw between PCs or send to people. Upload via link is development as well. https://github.com/Forceu/Gokapi 
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- I’m wondering if there’s a program where anyone can upload files, but can only be viewed and downloaded from the server by authenticated users. - Email does that. Anyone can send it to your mailbox, only you can download it. - Actually, that’s what I’ve done. It gets a bit tedious when the file size gets a bit big. - You may be surprised but a private (self-hosted) torrent tracker is how I did this when I had crappy internet and had to send over a bunch of pictures and video to family. - You can encrypt the data before sending, although it still should be fairly safe, speeds don’t matter much, there’s no storage to pay for or risk leaking. 
 
 







