Most cloud file platforms are destinations. Box, Dropbox, Egnyte and ShareFile each give you a place to put your files, a permissions model inside their cloud, and a UI on top. They’re mature products and a sensible choice for greenfield estates.
Foldr is a different shape. Files stay where they already are: SharePoint, OneDrive, S3, SMB, Google Drive, even Box or Dropbox if that’s where you keep them. Foldr sits in front and gives you one access surface, with permissions inherited from the source on every query. Below is a fair, structural comparison of the two approaches.
Foldr is a layer over the storage you already run. Switch it off and your SharePoint, S3, SMB and Drive estate is untouched. No migration in, no migration out, no held-hostage data.
Permissions are inherited from the source on every query, so the source of truth stays the source of truth. For regulated and privacy-sensitive estates, that’s the difference between “our files in their cloud” and “our files on our storage.”
The Foldr Appliance is a virtual machine you run in your own datacentre or hypervisor, with a fixed annual licence and no per-seat billing surprises. Air-gapped installs are supported. SaaS and Appliance share the same product surface; configuration travels between them via Foldr Flow.
Mashup is the visual block editor. MaSH is the plain-text script you can check into source control. Grace is the verbal route via the AI assistant. Pick whichever way of thinking suits the task; switch between them on the same workflow.
Box, Dropbox, Egnyte and ShareFile each give you a mature permissions model and a deep integration ecosystem inside their own cloud. If you’re starting from a blank slate, have no existing storage to honour, and want one vendor to own the whole stack, pick the one whose feature mix fits best.
The structural argument is the same in every case. These pages restate it with the right column scoped to one vendor.
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