I think the business tier could reasonably have a problem with it right now. That's a lot of storage, and having 300,000 files might not be a "corner case".
I can think of many other ways there may well be a coming Dropbox Apocalypse.
Lets see: OS vendors wake up from their slumber, and start putting the OS back where it needs to be: beyond Web 2.0. Fact is kiddies, dropbox and the like are a hacky solution to a problem that should have been solved, properly, decades ago .. if only the OS vendors had not sold their souls, rested on their laurels, etc.
Another apocalypse: someone targets Dropbox and does the big `rm -rf /* ยด .. its not impossible, although like most Apocalypses, not likely to be a problem until it happens.
Lets see: OS vendors wake up from their slumber, and start putting the OS back where it needs to be: beyond Web 2.0. Fact is kiddies, dropbox and the like are a hacky solution to a problem that should have been solved, properly, decades ago .. if only the OS vendors had not sold their souls, rested on their laurels, etc.
Another apocalypse: someone targets Dropbox and does the big `rm -rf /* ยด .. its not impossible, although like most Apocalypses, not likely to be a problem until it happens.