OneDrive vs Proton Drive — Qual vence?
Escolha OneDrive se: Usuários Microsoft 365 que querem armazenamento em nuvem que funciona perfeitamente com Word, Excel e Outlook
Escolha Proton Drive se: Usuários privacy-first que já confiam no Proton Mail e querem seus arquivos criptografados com a mesma abordagem zero-knowledge
Nossa opinião: OneDrive for simplicity, Proton Drive for power users.
| OneDrive | Proton Drive | |
|---|---|---|
| Preços | 5 GB free | Microsoft 365 Basic $1.99/mo (100 GB) | Free 1GB (5GB with Proton account) | Drive Plus $3.99/mo (200GB) |
| Funcionalidades | Deep Microsoft 365 integration, Personal Vault for sensitive files, Real-time co-authoring in Office apps, Ransomware detection and recovery, Photo management and memories | End-to-end encrypted file storage and sharing, Zero-access encryption — even Proton cannot read your files, Built-in photo backup from mobile, Integrates with Proton Mail, Calendar, and VPN, Open-source clients audited by third parties |
| Melhor para | Microsoft 365 users who want cloud storage that works seamlessly with Word, Excel, and Outlook | Privacy-first users who already trust Proton Mail and want their files encrypted with the same zero-knowledge approach |
| Curva de aprendizado | Fácil | Fácil |
A diferença real
Both offer free tiers, so the real question is what you get when you start paying.
OneDrive stands out with Deep Microsoft 365 integration and Personal Vault for sensitive files. Proton Drive counters with End-to-end encrypted file storage and sharing and Zero-access encryption — even Proton cannot read your files.
OneDrive's Achilles heel: sync client can be flaky — conflict files and mysterious sync failures still plague power users. Proton Drive's: storage amounts are small for the price — 200gb for $4/mo when google gives you 100gb for $2/mo. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Conclusão
If you value deep microsoft 365 integration and usuários microsoft 365 que, go with OneDrive. If usuários privacy-first que já matters more, Proton Drive is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.