this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2025
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If I had to guess, what probably triggered the ToS violation was transferring the content the day before, maybe the method or client used to do the transfer was too aggressive.
If I had to guess, there's more to this story than they're telling us. I've literally never heard of anyone losing access to their personal, legal files on Google drive because it violates their ToS. Google is a shit company and should be avoided, but this story just sounds like rage bait and maybe even just "organic" advertising for Scrivener.
Google doesn't even care about hosting pirated content on Drive as long as you're not sharing it to others.
I doubt they do, too. I'm just pointing out how ridiculous the picture above sounds without knowing the full story.