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Dash connects to Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Slack, Notion and more, and routes queries through large language models — leaving users to trust Dropbox's contractual assurances that connected and indexed data is not used to train third-party AI models.
Through 2025 Dropbox pushed Dash to general availability with self-serve sign-up and no IT required, marketing it as an AI assistant that indexes content across all of a user's connected apps — a model that, by design, reaches far beyond the files stored in Dropbox.
Dropbox's AI-powered universal search, Dash, is billed separately from storage at roughly $15 per user per month for teams and $35 per user per month for business — meaning the 'AI era' Dropbox used to justify layoffs arrives as an extra charge rather than an included feature.
Because Dash can be downloaded and set up with 'no sales or IT required,' an individual employee can connect and index an organization's apps and browser history without administrator oversight — recreating the shadow-IT data-governance risk that earlier consumer Dropbox use posed to enterprises.
Dropbox has staked its future on Dash, but through 2025 the AI product had not yet produced meaningful revenue offsetting the declining core — leaving analysts to question whether the layoffs-funded pivot is generating returns or simply burning the runway.
The Dropbox Dash Chrome extension requests permission to 'read and change all your data on all websites' and imports up to 90 days of browsing history — URLs, page titles, and page contents — to power its AI search.