Welcome, Ryan Encryption is on the short list of features for the next major release. I don't have plans to turn any part of QRecall into open source. Open source is a wonderful thing, but it doesn't completely protect you against obsolescence. My response to your concerns is this: Test QRecall and satisfy yourself that it can reliably recall your files. Should QRecall stop working with some future version of OS X, you can always recall your files and migrate them to another backup solution. What to do about WebDAV based services like S3 is another matter. On one hand, WebDAV backups are great because they're simple and easy to access. On the other hand, they are typically expensive (in terms of cost, time, limited size, and network bandwidth) and would really benefit from QRecall's compression and efficiency. However, the way QRecall works and the way WebDAV works are like oil and water. What I'd like to offer is a way of efficiently "cascading" an archive from a local disk to a WebDAV volume, so that your principle backup would be local and QRecall would periodically migrate incremental updates to the WebDAV volume. I'm not even close to working out the details, but that's the direction I'd like to go in. In the nearer term, I do plan to create a command-line version of QRecall. This would be more flexible for those with scripting knowledge, and would also be less prone to breaking when new versions of the operating system come out. I know this doesn't address all of your wishes, but I hope it clarifies the direction QRecall is headed.
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