I built Ellipticc Drive, an open-source cloud drive with true end-to-end encryption and post-quantum security, designed to be Dropbox-like in UX but with zero access to your data, even by the host.
What’s unique:
Free 10GB for every user, forever.
Open-source frontend (audit or self-host if you want)
Tech stack:
Frontend: Next.js
Crypto: WebCrypto (hashing) + Noble (core primitives)
Encryption: XChaCha20-Poly1305 (file chunks)
Key wrapping: Kyber (ML-KEM768)
Signing: Ed25519 + Dilithium2 (ML-DSA65)
Key derivation: Argon2id → Master Key → encrypts all keypairs & CEKs
Try it live: https://ellipticc.com
Frontend source: https://github.com/ellipticc/drive-frontend
Would love feedback from devs and security folks — particularly on encryption flow, architecture, or UX.
I’ll be around to answer every technical question in the comments!
This comment isn't really addressed to you, but it would be nice if OS vendors had an API integration to allow access to remote drive/dropbox like how MS has OneDrive and Mac has iCloud drive. I know WebDAV is a thing, but both these vendor locked drives have a much better UX.
As for your website, I don't believe the organisations/companies or testimonials are real. Maybe you should just trim it. This is what real testimonials look like: https://www.tarsnap.com/testimonials.html
Also, this SRP implementation seems a bit... sus.
https://github.com/ellipticc/drive-frontend/blob/main/lib/sr...
I would recommend OPAQUE instead.
I’ve just pushed an update addressing your points: commit d94969a(https://github.com/ellipticc/drive-frontend/commit/d94969a63...) — N and G are now public, hard-coded RFC 5054 constants (3072-bit for new users, keeping 2048-bit compatibility), and I fixed the session key calculation length.
I’ll definitely look into OPAQUE later on — I did some early testing, but ran into a WASM-related crash on the server side, so I’m holding off until I can debug that properly.
Really appreciate you pointing this out — it helped tighten things up!
You open sourced the frontend. Without a clear license.
That's not an "open-source cloud drive"