Toronto Star

Microsoft retreats from free OneDrive online storage

Reduced allotment for consumers enough for about 6,600 documents or 1,600 photos

- ANICK JESDANUN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— Microsoft is getting stingy with online storage.

The company just cut the free space it offers through its OneDrive service by two-thirds, making it the second major company to retreat from a consumer cloud-storage boom that tempted users with price cuts and ever-larger free offers.

Starting next year, Microsoft will cut its free option to five gigabytes, down from15 gigabytes now. Microsoft says the new allotment is enough for about 6,600 Office documents or 1,600 photos.

Earlier this year, Amazon eliminated a free five-gigabyte storage plan, although it still offers that amount to those who pay for its Prime loyalty program.

Microsoft is also effectivel­y doubling prices for some storage plans. It will charge $2 (U.S.) a month for 50 gigabytes of storage, including the free allotment, rather than the 100 gigabytes it currently offers at that price. The company is eliminatin­g a $4-a-month, 200-gigabyte plan.

Subscriber­s to Microsoft’s Office 365, which offers word processing, spreadshee­t and other apps starting at $7 a month, will now be limited to one terabyte, or 1,000 gigabytes, of storage. The company is killing off an “unlimited” option that it said a “small number of users” had abused by backing up numerous personal computers and storing entire movie collection­s. As with similar services, OneDrive can store just about any type of files. Under CEO Satya Nadella, Microsoft has emphasized mobile and online services such as OneDrive over traditiona­l sales of Windows and Office software for personal computers. The company has offered services for free as a way to hook people into using other services, such as Microsoft’s Bing search engine.

Microsoft didn’t explain why it was cutting back its storage offer, or why it advertised an “unlimited” option if actually using large amounts of storage posed a problem. The company declined to comment beyond a blog post it published earlier last week.

Microsoft says it will give people time to remove files that exceed its new limits. Here’s a look at some of the alternativ­es: Dropbox People get only two gigabytes for free, but can earn bonuses by getting friends to sign up or by uploading photos automatica­lly from phones. After that, it’s $17 a month for a terabyte of space.

Google Drive It’s15 gigabytes of free storage to start, but that includes Gmail messages on the account. Photos of up to 16 megapixels, which covers most phones, won’t count toward the limit. For more storage, prices range from $2 a month for 100 gigabytes to $300 for 30 terabytes.

Apple’s iCloud Free storage starts at five gigabytes, which includes what’s needed for iPhone backups. Those needing more can pay $1.29 a month for 50 gigabytes, $3.99 for 200 gigabytes or $12.99 for one terabyte. iCloud storage works best with Apple devices.

Amazon Cloud Drive Amazon offers five gigabytes of storage for free. For 20 gigabytes, it’s $10 per year; 50 gigabytes will set you back $25 annually. The maximum is 1,000 gigabytes for $500 a year. Amazon Prime customers ($79 a year) get unlimited photo storage free.

Yahoo Although Yahoo doesn’t have a general file-storage service, it offers a generous one terabyte for email and an additional one terabyte for photos and video through Flickr.

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