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jackovesk
16th June 2011, 05:15
Welcome to a corporate, cable TV-style world wide web

http://static.prisonplanet.com/p/images/june2011/150611top2.jpg

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Despite the corporate-driven hubbub surrounding the inevitability of “the cloud” replacing personal hard drives as the pre-eminent storage center for all web content, this system represents another dangerous trojan horse for the establishment to complete their agenda to regulate and shut down the free Internet.

Apple, Google and Amazon amongst other tech giants have all jumped on board with “the cloud,” a remote server network that allows users to store their data without using hard drives.

“It’s all part of a generational trend away from owning physical media content and towards renting media content from the computing universal cloud,” reports Investmentu.com. (see link below)

However, despite the convenience of having all your files easily accessible in one place wherever you go, the drawbacks are ominous.

The Cloud is basically a You Tube for everything, and the problem with this is that You Tube routinely blocks, censors and deletes content when ordered to by governments. As we reported back in May, You Tube is now following orders from governments to remove videos that show protests, demonstrations and other sensitive information the state doesn’t want others to see.

Indeed, Amazon’s Cloud network notoriously deleted the entire Wikileaks website from its servers following a phone call made by Senator Joe Lieberman’s Senate Homeland Security Committee demanding the website be axed.

Lieberman has been at the forefront of a push to purge the Internet of all dissent by empowering Obama with a figurative Internet kill switch that he would use to shut down parts of the Internet or terminate websites under the guise of national security. Lieberman spilled the beans on the true reason for the move during a CNN interview when he stated “Right now China, the government, can disconnect parts of its Internet in case of war and we need to have that here too.”

The cloud is therefore the perfect compliment to cybersecurity. The goal is to force everyone to use one of the cloud networks run by a major corporation, first by taxing, regulating, and making the normal Internet prohibitively expensive, and eventually by shutting it down all together. Once the vast majority of data is confined to the cloud network, harsher copyright, free speech and defamation laws will slowly be tightened, which will force the alternative media out of business.

When you agree to have your content hosted on the cloud, you are virtually handing it over to a large corporation which then through “terms of use” has the power to access or delete your information.

For example, Amazon’s Cloud Locker’s “binding agreement” with users mandates that Amazon can exercise, “the right to access, retain, use and disclose your account information and Your Files”.

Handing your data over to the cloud also makes it that bit easier for the government to obtain your private information.

“It’s not like putting your data in a desk drawer,” Chris Calabrese of the American Civil Liberties Union told the Washington Post. “Although the government needs a judge’s order to seize a hard drive, a subpoena is often enough authority to obtain cloud data.”

Security is also virtually non-existent on Amazon’s cloud. Amazon writes that “We do not guarantee that Your Files will not be subject to misappropriation, loss or damage and we will not be liable if they are. You’re responsible for maintaining appropriate security, protection and backup of Your Files.”

So if a hacker or Amazon itself deletes your files – tough luck – there’s no recourse.

Technology buffs have also predicted problems for people who later decide to switch between clouds, say moving from Apple to Google.

“Providers of cloud services like Apple, Google and Facebook will have strong profit incentives to hold on to their users to maximize revenue,” writes Tony D’Altorio. “They’ll do their best to limit consumers’ freedom to roam freely from cloud to cloud.”

“So consumers may get stuck in Apple’s iCloud and not be able to get out without a hassle. Mark Little, an analyst at Ovum, remarked, “Switching costs [from cloud to cloud] is likely to be one of the biggest parts of the cloud story.”

The cloud is nothing more than a trojan horse to eviscerate the free Internet. It’s an effort to assimilate the alternative media into a borg hive before destroying it from within. It’s one component of Internet 2 and the move towards a world wide web that resembles something more like cable TV than what we know as the Internet today, a system where a small number of giant corporations will work with governments to decide what can and cannot be published.

The cloud will kill the free Internet "Unless we get the Message Out" that it is a tool perfectly honed for shutting down free speech on the world wide web

http://www.prisonplanet.com/the-cloud-trojan-horse-for-internet-takeover.html

http://www.investmentu.com/2011/cloud-computing-unstoppable-yet-vulnerable.html

JoshERTW
16th June 2011, 14:46
Why would anyone use this? Stupidest idea ever I can't see it gaining any traction.

DeDukshyn
16th June 2011, 15:21
Why would anyone use this? Stupidest idea ever I can't see it gaining any traction.

It's already started. The servers are being built and tailored to cloud computing as I write this. IBM and Apple are both strong supporters. The appeal is that small computers and phones will soon be powerful enough to run a lot of decent software - but storage is a bit of an issue - especially if you have several devices. With "The Cloud" all your files are accessible anywhere (through cellular transmission), at anytime, by any personal device you have (PC, Phone, Netbook, game console, whatever).

So basically any intellectual property won't really even be yours anymore .. it wil belong to "The Cloud".... Mwhaahahahahah!

It will be crammed down our throats and pimped to kids as the greatest thing since sliced bread. It'll be in full force within 5 years.

Niobe
16th June 2011, 15:32
I've felt the same apprehension about this. The company I work for stores all of our files on Google Docs and now we are moving our total business system (eCommerce, accounting, everything to a cloud based program). If it was my business, I wouldn't be comfortable doing this.

Anno
16th June 2011, 15:41
...then when all your data is stored away somewhere, some evil terrorist group comes along and blows up some hub centers and oops, noone has any data anymore. Imagine everything on your computer just vanishing one day. Never mind music and films, what about ebooks, notes, your own photos and files. We would all go back to the 70's over-night and your 'computers' become useless bits of metal and plastic.

I will always keep my own copies of useful books and data stored away with a computer I'm in control of to access them. With solar chargers that are available these days and decent ruggedised laptops, it'd be pretty easy to go back into the dark ages and still keep a wealth of knowledge and information.

bitworm
16th June 2011, 15:45
You know, posting on a forum is kinda like putting our thoughts into the cloud.

Niobe
16th June 2011, 15:51
You know, posting on a forum is kinda like putting our thoughts into the cloud.

Haha what are you trying to say bitworm?

shadowstalker
16th June 2011, 16:01
Nortan stores data for free....
i never let them do it..

zebowho
16th June 2011, 17:09
I think its important for people to understand that "the cloud" isn't just one type of technology (or ideology) and where it started as well as what the intention was from that start.

Back around 2002 CERN was experimenting with something called "distributed processing" within their network. What they did was setup a type of server "management" software and workstation "client" software. What these did together was monitor idle CPU, RAM and disk activity on all the networked computers. When someone needed to process a huge amount of data, (number crunching) they queried the network and of those machines that were sitting idle, the mangement software "pooled" the collective resources (again CPU, RAM, disk space) into one virtual type of server to act as more of a super computer which then "crunched" those numbers in far less time than one machine alone could do.

Amazon's EC2 is mostly this type of setup. They also offer VPS hosting, storage lockers etc but these are off shoots of the original idea. Apple and Google on the other hand are focusing on more of the "home user' aspect of cloud environments which would never need "distributed processing" as in the CERN approach, more like your own personal file sharing network. Could there be problems with the latter example? Sure! There are always those that would use technology for nefarious reasons which is why its important for us all to be diligent and truly understand what we're talking about. Does this mean we should be paranoid (or at least distrustful) of that technology? IMHO, No.

You see, in networking (everyone should go through a course in "networking 101") it is a good idea to not only have a backup of your data, but ALSO a redundant copy which is stored off site for recover-ability in case of major disaster. This is one aspect cloud technology makes possible (and easier), even still, we should make sure the service agreement protects the user (you) and that your data is encrypted. Now if one decides Not to use cloud technology and still makes their own backups, are you storing a separate copy off site, like say a safety deposit box? Just something to think about...

Bottom line, the cloud should be looked at with caution with its intended application but certainly not distrust or paranoia. This one would be all to easy to "throw the baby out with...." well you get the meaning.

-z

Cjay
17th June 2011, 06:56
A lot of companies are offering internet-based data backup. SAY NO! Buy a USB external drive instead.

This creepy "Cloud" concept reminds me of this thread:
City Government demands all keys to properties belonging to Cedar Falls residents
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?22746-City-Government-demands-all-keys-to-properties-belonging-to-Cedar-Falls-residents&highlight=Cedar+Falls