Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 9th Dec 2009 23:28 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 398871
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RE: Always anti-cloud! Here's why.
by strcpy on Thu 10th Dec 2009 19:05
in reply to "Always anti-cloud! Here's why."
I don't want to even imagine the armageddon that will ensue the day some hacker (inside job or from outside) hacks into Google's servers and grabs that data from users for not-so-good purposes.
Quite good point.
In another news: "Security researchers have spotted the Zeus botnet running an unauthorized command and control center on Amazon's EC2 cloud computing infrastructure".
You didn't have to wait long.
RE[2]: Always anti-cloud! Here's why.
by sbergman27 on Thu 10th Dec 2009 19:18
in reply to "RE: Always anti-cloud! Here's why."




Member since:
2008-08-27
I'll never, EVER surrender my personal data to the so-called cloud! I make a regular backup of my computers and if something goes wrong, I'm in control of when, where and how to restore it. And if something goes REALLY wrong, (corrupt backup when trying to restore, bad disk, etc.) I only have myself to blame, and not some company out there who's going to "sorry for the inconvenience" their way out of the whole thing and cover their rear ends hiding behind clauses from their terms of service. Microsoft can crash their Windows Live or Danger servers all they want; I'm not going to be affected the least bit.
I don't really use any Google product other than YouTube, and that's because I haven't found a degooglized alternative. GMail is for collecting the spam that is generated when you register in forums and the like, not for real email. My personal email is POP3 from my ISP saved to my computer and backed up by myself in Outlook .pst files. I don't use Google Docs, or Google Wave, or Google Voice, or Google Maps... or whatever is Google's next excuse to track your each and every move. Of course, no Android either! Even if Google were truly the savior of the digital era (which I don't think they are) and their intentions when collecting all of your data were good, I don't want to even imagine the armageddon that will ensue the day some hacker (inside job or from outside) hacks into Google's servers and grabs that data from users for not-so-good purposes.