Click Submit Selection. The workflow editor shows your GoPro Cloud source with the selected items. Pick your destination (local disk, Backblaze B2, AWS S3, Dropbox, or another supported provider), configure options, and click Save Workflow.
Close the workflow editor with the X button in the top-right corner. On the Workflows page, click the green Run button on your workflow card. Blober starts the transfer with parallel downloads, progress tracking, and automatic resume.
GoPro’s web portal limits batch downloads to 25 files at a time, bundled as ZIPs. Large downloads often fail. There is no bulk export and no “Download All” button.
Blober is the only tool that connects to GoPro Cloud. rclone, MultCloud, and Flexify do not support GoPro as a source.
No manual downloads. Files move directly from GoPro Cloud to your destination.
No file limits. Transfer 10 files or 10,000 in one run.
No subscription. Blober is a one-time purchase.
No middleman. Everything runs on your machine. Your credentials stay local.
Data holders are individuals and organizations that accumulate, manage, and preserve large volumes of digital files as a core part of their work. They aren’t just storing files — they’re responsible for keeping data accessible, organized, and safe across years and even decades.
Data holders include:
Photographers and videographers with terabytes of RAW footage and project archives
Researchers and academics maintaining datasets, papers, and experimental outputs
Small businesses managing client records, invoices, contracts, and media assets
IT administrators responsible for infrastructure backups and compliance archives
Content creators with libraries of video, audio, and design files across platforms
Legal and medical professionals bound by retention requirements for sensitive records
Personal archivists preserving family photos, home videos, and documents
What unites them is a common problem: data grows, scatters, and becomes harder to manage over time.
Blober is a desktop application purpose-built for data holders who need to move, organize, and back up files across cloud providers and local storage — without recurring fees.
Instead of downloading files to your machine and re-uploading them, Blober transfers data directly between providers. This matters for data holders because:
Saves time — a 2 TB migration doesn’t bottleneck on your home internet
Saves bandwidth — your ISP data cap stays intact
Reduces failure points — no half-downloaded files sitting on your local disk
Data holders accumulate files over years. Manually sorting them into folders is unsustainable. Blober supports path templates that use file metadata to auto-organize during transfer:
/{year}/{month}/{camera_model}/{filename}
A flat dump of 50,000 files becomes a clean archive:
/2025/06/HERO13 Black/GX015742.MP4
/2025/06/Canon EOS R5/IMG_4521.CR3
/2026/01/iPhone 15 Pro/IMG_0032.HEIC
This works for any transfer — cloud-to-cloud, cloud-to-local, or local-to-cloud.
Most cloud migration tools charge per-GB or require annual subscriptions with data caps. For data holders who move terabytes regularly, those costs compound:
Tool
Pricing Model
Cost for 10 TB/year
Flexify.io
~$0.03/GiB per migration
~$300+ (plus egress)
MultCloud
$99.98/year for 2.4 TB cap
~$400+ (need multiple renewals)
rclone
Free but manual
$0 (but hours of CLI configuration)
Blober
One-time purchase
One price, unlimited transfers
You buy Blober once. Transfer 1 TB or 100 TB — the price doesn’t change.
Data holders shouldn’t need a subscription to manage their own files. Blober runs locally on your machine — your credentials never pass through third-party servers, your transfer bandwidth isn’t metered, and your workflow isn’t gated by monthly caps.
One license. Unlimited providers. Unlimited data.
Get Blober and take control of your data workflow.
GoPro Cloud (included with GoPro Plus / GoPro Premium) stores your camera footage automatically. It’s convenient, until you need to actually do something with it.
The problems with keeping everything in GoPro Cloud:
No easy bulk export. GoPro’s web portal limits batch downloads to 25 files at a time, bundled as a ZIP. Large downloads frequently fail or time out.
No third-party integrations. No other file transfer tool (rclone, MultCloud, Flexify) can connect to GoPro Cloud. You’re stuck with the GoPro web interface.
Subscription lock-in. Cancel GoPro Plus and you lose access to your footage. Your media is held hostage by a recurring charge.
No redundancy. If GoPro changes their cloud offering or shuts it down, you have no backup unless you’ve already downloaded everything manually.
Why Dropbox makes a good destination:
Accessible everywhere. Desktop, mobile, web. Dropbox works across all devices.
Selective sync. Keep large video files in the cloud and only download what you need locally.
Sharing built in. Send footage to clients, collaborators, or editors with a link.
Established and reliable. Dropbox has been around since 2007 and isn’t going anywhere.
Integration with editing tools. Many video editors and photo apps integrate directly with Dropbox.
Moving your footage from GoPro Cloud to Dropbox gives you a second copy in a provider you control, one that doesn’t depend on a GoPro subscription to access.
Blober is the only desktop app that connects directly to GoPro Cloud. No browser extensions, no manual downloads, no CLI config files. You create a workflow, press play, and your media transfers automatically.
Open Blober, go to the Workflows page, and click New Workflow. Select GoPro as the source and Dropbox as the destination. Pick the folders you want to transfer from and where they should land.
Click the play button on your workflow. Blober connects to both providers and starts transferring files immediately. Every file (photos, videos, time-lapses) gets moved directly from GoPro Cloud to Dropbox without touching your local disk first (unless you want it to).
The Progress page shows exactly what’s happening: files transferred, bytes moved, current speed, and estimated time remaining. If something goes wrong, you can pause, retry, or cancel at any time.
Photographers and videographers generate enormous volumes of data. A single shoot can produce hundreds of gigabytes of RAW photos and 4K/5.3K video files. Over months and years, that adds up to terabytes of irreplaceable media scattered across local drives, cloud providers, and camera-specific platforms.
The challenges are consistent:
Files are large - 4K video clips are often 1–5 GB each. 5.3K GoPro footage is even larger.
Storage is fragmented - footage lives on local SSDs, NAS devices, Google Drive, GoPro Cloud, and various object storage providers
Organization is painful - manually sorting files into date/camera/project folders is tedious and error-prone
Backups are inconsistent - some footage has 3 copies, some has 1, some has none
Cloud costs add up - Google Drive, AWS S3, and iCloud storage bills grow every month
Most creators have files spread across multiple providers - intentionally or not. Blober connects to all of them in one interface:
Provider
Use Case
GoPro Cloud
Action camera footage auto-uploaded
Google Drive
Client deliverables and sharing
Local NAS / SSD
Primary working storage
Backblaze B2
Long-term archive (cheap, reliable)
Wasabi
Hot archive (no egress fees)
AWS S3
Production infrastructure
Cloudflare R2
CDN-adjacent delivery
Instead of logging into 4 different dashboards and downloading/uploading manually, Blober lets you build workflows that move files between any of these in a single operation.
If you shoot with GoPro cameras, you likely have footage auto-uploaded to GoPro Cloud. The problem: GoPro’s web portal only allows batch downloads of 25 files at a time (as ZIPs that frequently fail), and no third-party tool supports GoPro Cloud as a transfer source.
Blober is the only tool that connects to GoPro Cloud. You can:
Download all GoPro footage to local storage
Transfer directly to Backblaze B2 or Wasabi for long-term archival
Organize files by camera model, date, and resolution automatically
No other tool - not rclone, not MultCloud, not Flexify - supports GoPro Cloud.
Blober’s path templating system uses file metadata to automatically organize transfers. Instead of dumping files into flat folders, you define a template:
/{camera_model}/{capture_date}/{filename}
And Blober organizes the output:
/HERO13 Black/2026-01-23/GX015742.MP4
/Sony A7IV/2026-01-20/DSC09845.ARW
/DJI Mini 4/2026-01-18/DJI_0042.MP4
This works across all providers - GoPro Cloud to local, Google Drive to B2, or any combination. Months of manual folder sorting, automated in one workflow.
For long-term storage, the hyperscalers (AWS, Azure, GCS) are expensive. Creative professionals are increasingly moving to budget-friendly alternatives:
Provider
Storage Cost
Egress
Why Creators Choose It
Backblaze B2
$6/TB/month
Free (up to 3x)
Cheapest reliable archive
Wasabi
$6.99/TB/month
Free
No egress fees, predictable billing
Cloudflare R2
$15/TB/month
Free
Zero egress, great for delivery
Blober supports all of these, making it trivial to set up an archive workflow: shoot → ingest to local NAS → archive to Backblaze B2 → done. One-time license, no per-GB fees.
After each wedding: 80 GB of RAW photos + 40 GB of video. Create a Blober workflow that copies everything from your SSD to Backblaze B2, organized by date and event name. Run it after every wedding with one click.
Finished projects sit on Google Drive eating into your 2 TB plan. Use Blober to move completed projects to Wasabi for long-term storage at a fraction of the cost, freeing up Google Drive space for active work.
Years of GoPro footage sitting in GoPro Cloud with no easy way out. Use Blober to download everything to a local NAS, organized by camera and date. Cancel GoPro Plus knowing your footage is safe.
100+ GB per flight day across DJI footage on local cards and backup copies on Google Drive. Use Blober to standardize your archive: everything goes to Backblaze B2, organized by date and location, with a local NAS mirror.
rclone is free and powerful, but it requires terminal expertise. For each new storage provider, you configure a remote. For each workflow, you write a command with precise flags. There’s no visual interface, no persistent workflows, and no GoPro support.
If you’re a software engineer, rclone might work. If you’re a photographer who wants to focus on photography, Blober is what you need.
Blober is available for Windows, macOS, and Linux. One-time license, currently at discounted beta pricing. No subscriptions. No per-GB fees. No data caps.
Connect your providers, build your workflows, and take control of your media archive.