A year ago, I wrote a piece about cloud computing's dark secret: that using it in Europe was probably equivalent to making all your files readily available to the US government. And that was before the Snowden revelations confirmed that this was no mere theoretical possibility. I'm not claiming any amazing prescience here: I certainly had no idea of the scale of what was going on, as I've explained in a series of posts on the NSA spying programme. But I can claim a deep and abiding unease about cloud computing, which is why I never jumped on that particular bandwagon, and have written relatively little about it on this blog.
On Open Enterprise blog.
A year ago, I wrote a piece about cloud computing's dark secret:
that using it in Europe was probably equivalent to making all your
files readily available to the US government. And that was before the
Snowden revelations confirmed that this was no mere theoretical
possibility. I'm not claiming any amazing prescience here: I certainly
had no idea of the scale of what was going on, as I've explained in a series of posts on the NSA spying
programme. But I can claim a deep and abiding unease about cloud
computing, which is why I never jumped on that particular bandwagon, and
have written relatively little about it on this blog. - See more at:
http://blogs.computerworlduk.com/open-enterprise/2013/12/allseens-internet-of-things-all-seeing-too/index.htm#sthash.7v5Wi5d5.dpuf
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