A number of leading authorities have been urging caution on the adoption of
web-based services as a new wave of vendors unveil cloud initiatives.
Cloud computing involves computing resources hosted in an off-premise 'cloud'
rather than an in-house computer room.
The system offers organisations a low cost alternative to buying and
maintaining a computer infrastructure and allows users to access the
applications anywhere and anytime.
However, the advantages are now accompanied by growing concerns over data
privacy, regulation and interoperability issues.
A number of vendors have announced cloud computing offerings in recent weeks,
notably Amazon, Google and Oracle, and this was closely followed by IBM's launch
of new social networking tools called
Bluehouse.
The launches have spurred warnings from analyst firms which advise businesses
to adopt such offerings with care.
Consultancy Global Secure Systems (GSS) said that organisations should review
their IT security arrangements before jumping, even on a trial basis, into the
world of cloud computing.
GSS managing director David Hobson pointed to provisions in the Data
Protection Act that oblige companies to state clearly where they are storing
customer data. The legislation also means that companies cannot store their data
outside the European Union.
The problem with signing up to a cloud computing vendor is that company data
could be stored almost anywhere in the world, particularly because vendors need
to replicate the data around the world to maintain their own disaster recovery
and backup plans, said Hobson.
"Our caution here at GSS doesn't reflect on the integrity of these new cloud
computing services in any way," he said. "It merely reflects the fact that
corporate governance rules and, of course, data protection legislation needs to
play catch-up with the real world."
Richard Stallman, founder of the GNU project and the Free Software
Foundation, voiced more grave concerns about allowing a third party to host
private data. He advised organisations to keep private documents in their own
hands "for your freedom's sake".
Stallman also noted flexibility issues stemming from organisations being
locked-in to a particular cloud vendor. "If you do your computing using someone
else's server, the server operator has control over it," he told vnunet.com.
"It's just as bad as running a proprietary program, and worse, because even
the painful option of patching the binary is impossible."
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