I'm still good with DataVault.
You also have to decide what you're comfortable with in terms of trusting you're getting what you expect/want:
- Open Source software: Should be less open to back-door access to your data you don't know about and should have peer review for bugs etc - but most folk trust pre-compiled code anyway and just install it, not knowing actually what it was compiled from.
- Apps that will place your private data in the cloud, albeit encrypted: Might be more open to be compromised - and you have to trust the encryption is robustly implemented
DataVault is not open source, but doesn't put your data in the cloud unless you want it to for sync between devices. You can also sync via a direct WiFi connection.
So it's a case of your approach to such things and what/who you're prepared trust.
You also have to decide what you're comfortable with in terms of trusting you're getting what you expect/want:
- Open Source software: Should be less open to back-door access to your data you don't know about and should have peer review for bugs etc - but most folk trust pre-compiled code anyway and just install it, not knowing actually what it was compiled from.
- Apps that will place your private data in the cloud, albeit encrypted: Might be more open to be compromised - and you have to trust the encryption is robustly implemented
DataVault is not open source, but doesn't put your data in the cloud unless you want it to for sync between devices. You can also sync via a direct WiFi connection.
So it's a case of your approach to such things and what/who you're prepared trust.