
The Dropbox website has an events page - /events – that details all the recent activity around your Dropbox account. There are however a few things that you may do at your end. Unlike Gmail, Dropbox doesn’t offer you a list of IP address that have recently accessed your account else that would have really helped understand if anyone else got into your account during that period. Perform a Security Audit of your Dropbox Account The bug has now been fixed but it to ensure that no one else has accessed your Dropbox account in the recent past, here are few things you should do.

They could just type any random characters in the password box and the Dropbox would let them in. The system was left wide open for about 5-6 hours and anyone could sign-in to your Dropbox account if all they knew were your email address. Open the Dropbox app on your phone or tablet.Something really scary happened at Dropbox recently.Once your files have green check icons over the file icons, they have successfully uploaded to Dropbox. When you add files to your Dropbox folder, they'll upload to Dropbox. Copy and paste or drag and drop files into the Dropbox folder.For larger files or folders, use the desktop or mobile apps, which don’t have a file size limit. Note: Each file or folder that you upload on must be 50 GB or smaller. If you chose Folder, select a folder and click Upload.If you chose Files, select as many files as you like and click Open.Any files you add to your Dropbox account sync across all your computers, phones, and tablets where you installed Dropbox.

Once you create an account, you can add files to your Dropbox account.

Click the box to agree to the Dropbox terms.Type your name and email address (your email address is the username for your Dropbox account).
