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Cloud Computing May Draw Government Action

Posted by Soulskill on Fri Sep 12, 2008 06:31 PM
from the internet-is-a-series-of-jet-streams dept.
snydeq brings us this excerpt from InfoWorld: "Cloud computing will soon become an area of hot debate in Washington, as the increasing popularity of cloud-based services is putting pressure on policy makers to answer tough questions on the privacy and security of data in the cloud. For example: Who owns the data that consumers store on the network? Should law enforcement agencies have easier access to personal information in the cloud than data on a personal computer? Do government procurement regulations need to change to allow agencies to embrace cloud computing? So far, US courts have generally ruled that private data stored in the cloud doesn't enjoy the same level of protection from law enforcement searches that data stored on a personal computer does, said Ari Schwartz, COO of the Center for Democracy and Technology. 'I do think government has an almost infinite ability to screw up things when they can't see the future,' former Bill Clinton tech policy adviser Mike Nelson added. 'We have to have leadership that believes in empowering users and empowering citizens.'"
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  • by Maestro485 (1166937) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:35PM (#24985499)
    It's interesting that if I have a locker in a public place with a lock on it, I have a legal right to privacy. Yet, if I have an online storage account with a password ("lock"), it's fair game.

    Lawyers, please enlighten me!
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Generally speaking the government doesn't want you having any privacy whatsoever so their automatic assumption is that you don't have rights unless the courts force them to acknowledge them. I don't think that the EFF and the ACLU are going to sit idle on this but lately the government (Dem controlled mind all you Obama-will-fix-everything believers) has been passing very repressive legislature. I fully expect there to be a lot more legislature in the pipes on this in the near future. None of it in our (
      • by FlyByPC (841016) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:50PM (#24985637) Homepage
        So why use the cloud? Keep all your important data on devices that you physically control, and encrypt anything you consider sensitive.

        That said, I do like the lock-on-public-storage-space analogy the GP invokes, especially since our government seems to increasingly have a hard time remembering what the Constitution is.

        Other than convenience, are there real reasons to use/trust cloud computing -- that is, to trust offsite storage with critical information?
        • One of the biggest reasons my employer let me switch their file downloads from their dedicated server to Amazon S3 is reliability (the other being cost). With our own dedicated server we have to take care of hard drive failures, manage service uptime, and so on. Amazon takes care of all that stuff for us.

        • So why use the mail? Keep all your important data on devices that you physically control, and encrypt anything you consider sensitive.

          So why use a security deposit box? Keep all your important data on devices that you physically control, and encrypt anything you consider sensitive.

          So why use an internal hard drive? Keep all your important data on devices that you physically control, and encrypt anything you consider sensitive.

          Or, I don't know, we could all be actually upset with the way things are going and

        • Why does there need to be a reason other than convenience? I could run my own mail server, which would involve purchasing extra equipment, learning how to administer a mail server, paying more money to my ISP to let me run a server, and spending a non-trivial amount of time administering the whole thing. Or I could just let gmail do all the work for me, for free.

          Put it this way: other than convenience, are there real reasons to trust landlords, construction workers, and architects rather than designing, bui

          • by Fulcrum of Evil (560260) on Friday September 12 2008, @07:43PM (#24985975)
            sure, if you're okay with living like we did 10,000 years ago.
            • Or living like people still live like on the other side of the world.
              • Good point.

                I would have thought that someone old enough to have a 6 digit ID (Fulcrum of Evil) would be old enough to understand that only 1/3rd (if that!) of the world actually has the benefits of fulfilling their basic needs... Even the homeless in north america have it pretty good, compared to africa, china or many parts of russia.
                • Yeah, well I am mostly concerned with my own corner of the world. More specifically, I just want to short the stupid need/want argument, since it's been redundant longer than I've been alive. Really, read Maslow's hierarchy and tell me if there's anything to add to it. Also note that the people in Africa are so very poor largely because the people in power are crooks and thugs who derive advantage from their misery. Nothing I can really do, and totally irrelevant to the argument.
            • Maslow adds a couple more: we also need personal safety, friendship/love, and the ability to pursue one's potential (in that order?). Given those things, sure, why not live the way we did 10000 years ago? We don't need iPods, exactly... the technological details of how we get our self-fulfillment are irrelevant. Of course, standards for safety have changed (health care (everywhere but the USA, at least), something like habeas corpus (ditto), etc...), but fundamentally technology is there to enable richer
          • You asked:

            Is there something that stops you from encrypting information before putting it on the cloud?

            Well, yes... The usual point of the cloud is not just storage... it is computations. I use amazon S3 for encrypted and unencrypted storage, but the Elastic Compute Cloud virtual machines need to be able to decrypt it when necessary. So if the cloud is doing work on the data it needs it to be decrypted.

            --jeffk++

      • by dunnius (1298159) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:51PM (#24985641)

        Generally speaking the government doesn't want you having any privacy whatsoever so their automatic assumption is that you don't have rights unless the courts force them to acknowledge them. I don't think that the EFF and the ACLU are going to sit idle on this but lately the government (Dem controlled mind all you Obama-will-fix-everything believers) has been passing very repressive legislature. I fully expect there to be a lot more legislature in the pipes on this in the near future. None of it in our (working class) favor, of course.

        Unfortunately, the Government wants to do away with the constitution. This is why it is important to support the EFF, ACLU, and others in order to protect the constitution.

        • Too bad the ACLU refuses to support the 2nd amendment as it pertains to the individual. I refuse to support a organization that selectively supports the constitution.

          Sorry, it it's all or nothing.

          • I always hear this. Does any accomplished active* non-government organization actually support more of the civil liberties amendments/main text, than the ACLU? And why not donate X% of your "activism fund" to ACLU and the rest to NRA? It's not like ACLU actively goes against gun rights, at least recently, even if they ever did. The NRA only supports one amendment for crying out loud; and it's not like the ACLU makes a secret of not supporting the Second.

            It just doesn't make sense. I suspect that people like

            • by schnikies79 (788746) on Friday September 12 2008, @08:03PM (#24986095)

              I was a bit harsh in my post. I don't really dislike the ACLU, it just disappoints me off when an organization that supports liberty doesn't always support it. I think every amendment is as important as the others.

              That being said, I support them in most every other situation and have donated to them.

              From the ACLU website: [aclu.org]

              "Given the reference to "a well regulated Militia" and "the security of a free State," the ACLU has long taken the position that the Second Amendment protects a collective right rather than an individual right."

              • Fair enough, and I agree with you (and 5 Supreme Court justices) about the inconsistency of their stance.

                I have known other people who really do hate them, and they always use the gun rights excuse. I was mostly thinking of that in general.

                But do you really think the 25th is as important as the 1st, 2nd or 19th; and this is to say nothing of the 16th? :)

          • They don't refuse, they defer defending the 2nd to the NRA. It makes sense to let specialists do their work for them.

          • I've never been a fan of the ACLU's methods. They seem to support whatever cause is in the media at the moment rather than the issues that actually need to be addressed.

          • bite me. The ACLU doesn't defend the 2nd ammendment because the NRA already does it. Why should they go stepping on toes when they can just cooperate?
        • And according to the article: "Mike Nelson added. 'We have to have leadership that believes in empowering users and empowering citizens.'"

          And it doesn't appear that either choice this year will be that type of leadership. We desperately need a viable 3rd party candidate, that represents more closely the will of our founding fathers, and the constitution. While we're at it....I'd like a pony too.

          :(

      • What does Obama's campaign or his supporters have to do with the trend of governments taking more power and privacy away from their citizens?

        1. The current congress isn't heavilly Democratically controlled. They can't pass whatever law they please w/o some Rep support.

        2. Bush and the congress he had in his earlier years were/are Republican, and that administration doesn't have exactly a sterling shining record. A lot of freedoms were happilly taken because they were dangerous in a "post 9/11 world."

        It h

    • IANAL

      I fail to see how you can make a local law against any usage of cloud computing. After all, which country is the information in?

      And I hate to say it, but it might be time for a worldwide treaty with business that store data outside the signatory nations being blocked from doing business's in those countries.
      • I fail to see how you can make a local law against any usage of cloud computing.

        Oh, there'd no difficulty making a local law against cloud computing; all you need to do is get enough clueless legislators to agree on it. Enforcing it, now, that's a different, much more difficult proposition.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      There is the pretty clear difference in that your password is not a "lock" on your data. It is simply how you let the service know it is okay to send your data over the internet and let you edit it. An actual lock for "cloud" services would be for the data to be encrypted and only decrypted client-side.

      Perhaps somehow it could be decrypted by Javascript with a passphrase entered client-side. There are lots of problems with that approach the main two that occur to me are (1) the service probably wants to ser

  • by RiCentro (1362973) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:48PM (#24985607)
    I love how those who supposedly have the people's best interests in mind, would rather worry about how easy it is for them to get their hands on my information as opposed to just protecting my information.
  • by sleeponthemic (1253494) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:50PM (#24985627) Homepage
    Want to find the person who coined this stupid term and burn his house down?
    • Re:Anybody else (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Daffy Duck (17350) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:58PM (#24985711) Homepage

      Sign me up. I've heard people claiming they put their data "in the cloud" because that makes it safer. Why do they think this? Because "the cloud" is a concept rather than an object, and therefore cannot be destroyed?

      I prefer to replace "the cloud" with "a bunch of servers I don't control and can't locate". Clears a lot of things up for me.

  • by miller60 (554835) * on Friday September 12 2008, @06:50PM (#24985629) Homepage
    The article briefly mentions a survey on cloud computing [datacenterknowledge.com] released today by Pew Internet, which warns that "sloud users show high levels of concern when presented with scenarios in which companies might use their data for purposes users may or may not fully understand ahead of time. This suggests user worry over control of the information they store online." That includes using personal information for ad targeting.

    Earlier this year Princeton University held a forum on cloud computing, which included an in-depth session of data ownership in the cloud and the issues it raises. It's available on YouTube [youtube.com] in its 90-minute entirety.
  • Easy questions. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CSMatt (1175471) on Friday September 12 2008, @06:59PM (#24985713)

    Who owns the data that consumers store on the network?

    The customers.

    Should law enforcement agencies have easier access to personal information in the cloud than data on a personal computer?

    No.

    Do government procurement regulations need to change to allow agencies to embrace cloud computing?

    Only if they pick the wrong answers for 1 and 2.

    • "Should law enforcement agencies have easier access to personal information in the cloud than data on a personal computer?

      No."

      But the fact is they have. It is easier to force a company into releasing data about you because they do not have an interest in the privacy of your data. If they want my offline data they will have to personally come to my house(or basement ;) ) and demand that I release my data. I now have knowledge about it and I may even have the file in an encrypted form making it hard to get. I

    • Yeah, I don't understand how fundamentally having data on a cloud computing system is any different from having data on a shared computer, a. la. any webhost that sells shared hosting, etc.

      I mean, plan for that. Manage permissions. If you don't like it, build your own cloud.

  • Use that fun weapon known as encryption and then you can enjoy your right to privacy.
  • Clinton adviser? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MadAhab (40080) <slasherNO@SPAMahab.com> on Friday September 12 2008, @07:27PM (#24985897) Homepage Journal

    What the hell, I'll go for this one.

    The Clinton administration's opposition to encryption technology has made it vastly easier for governments to spy on their citizens, by slowing the adoption of encryption into core internet data communications.

    Even John Ashcroft opposed their restrictions (though these days he has a different attitude towards government powers).

    So spare me the crocodile tears.

    If you want your data to be secure, you better own, host, store, and secure it yourself. No major corporation is going to protect you from governmental powers, and you really wouldn't want them to have that power. At least the government is theoretically accountable to you in some way.

    As much as I like Google and Yahoo etc, you can't get the same kind of accountability from them you can from the local dogcatcher.

  • by unity100 (970058) on Friday September 12 2008, @07:35PM (#24985941) Homepage Journal
    supposedly republicans were to be a bunch that were for less govt. control.

    EVERY goddamn thing they did in the last 8 years have been the EXACT opposite of this.

    you definitely need democrats now. at least they are not psychopath as this bunch.
    • supposedly republicans were to be a bunch that were for less govt. control.

      Actually, quite frankly, that's why people* are excited about the Palin nomination, and how McCain can be saying that "change is coming" and not be laughed out of the election by his own party.

      *(People, of the appropriate political persuasions. This post does not seek to speculate upon the political efficacy with which any candidate will implement the alluded-to agenda of change in the future, or that the message and results antic

      • as he asked mccain :

        http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/09/12/campaign.wrap/index.html [cnn.com]

        Walters went on to press Palin's reformist credentials, noting McCain has served in Washington for more than two decades and asking repeatedly, "Who's she going to reform, you?

          • honesty is more important for me.

            there was nothing about change in mccain's campaign for months. when they saw obama was successful, they suddenly adopted 'change'. what change, you ask them, you get no answers. at least barbara walters wasnt able to get any.

            this kind of hypocrisy tells me that there is real dishonesty in a person. veterans are not exempt from being dishonest too.
    • Republicans have strayed from their "less government" standpoint and are in bed with big business in general, but particularly resource-barron and credit industries.

      Democrats, however, are not only doing what the republicans do, but are traditionally (and actually) in bed with hollywood.

      You have two choices, strychnine or ricin...

      Personally, I'm actually leaning toward the republicans simply because they have so many people they're already sold out to, they may not get around to giving their handouts to the

      • let me put it this way :

        you need to go to college. choices are A,B,C,D.

        colleges C and D are way out of your budget.

        College B, is too far away, and you would need to check up on your family every once in a while.

        what do you choose ? you choose A.

        so dont give me that crap about how one is bad, how other is also bad. life is a string of choices for the better among worst.

        for now, democrats are better. at least their candidates show some decency.

        however if you have any magical plan that may
          • you WILL get shot, regardless. your choice is getting shot in a manner that hurts less. thats the point.

            and, i have to say, all these stuff against democrat candidates are wildly exaggerated.

            obama is a world class candidate. if you dont want it, give him to eu. we appreciate talent here. dont also have fuckin' inclination to portray everything as equally bad.
      • unfortunately they dont have enough majority to push stuff in senate.

        and with the ass whopping number of 'executive' authorities and orders bush had piled up thanks to 6 years of republican congress, i very much doubt that senate is that powerful anymore, be it republican or democrat.

        someone needs to go into white house, clear all the 'executive' authorities that have been so vulgarly given by the rep senate, and therefore restore the plural rule in the country. that cant happen if you have a republic
  • banks? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I keep my money in a bank. What's different about keeping my data in a data bank?
  • Can't anyone come up something better? How about 'web software'? Jeez.

    • Why "web software"? A lot of it has nothing to do with HTML/HTTP. For example, with Amazon's EC2, you use the web to manage your virtual hosts, but you might not have any web servers running on the hosts. Perhaps your application uses FTP, ssh, or even NFS to transfer data.

    • Don't lawmakers and the courts usually love precedent?

      Only if it doesn't appear that you are a terrorist threat. Or trying to defraud the studios protected by the RIAA/MPAA. Or trying to voice an opinion that is contrary to the 'norm'.

      • And why can't government officials intercept your key during transit?

        Because you don't transmit the key.

        Do you think even decrypting your data for your personal use won't expose it if anyone else wants access?

        Depends on how secure your computer is.