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US Unhappy With Australians Storing Data On Australian Shores

Fluffeh writes "The United States' global trade representative has strongly criticized a perceived preference on the part of large Australian organizations for hosting their data on-shore in Australia, claiming it created a significant trade barrier for U.S. technology firms. A number of U.S. companies had expressed concerns that various departments in the Australian Government, namely the Department of Defence had been sending negative messages about cloud providers based outside the country, implying that 'hosting data overseas, including in the United States, by definition entails greater risk and unduly exposes consumers to their data being scrutinized by foreign governments.' Recently, Acting Victorian Privacy Commissioner Anthony Bendall highlighted some of the privacy concerns with cloud computing, particularly in its use by the local government. He said the main problems were the lack of control over stored data and privacy, in overseas cloud service providers."

254 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. ERROR by Elbart · · Score: 5, Funny

    The irony-meter is off the charts. Or is this a late April-fools-article?

    1. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The US believes in being fair. They need the Australian government & companies to store data on US servers so it can be fairly stolen by them not just China.
      They're too lazy/incapable of getting the data themselves.

    2. Re:ERROR by Moryath · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, this is typical US attitude. They think they own the world.

      If the rest of the world would tell the US to piss off, maybe things could get better. Instead, the US throws their totalitarian weight around and we get bought-off British judges trying to extradite British citizens to the US for conduct that occurred in Britain, between British citizens, that was 100% legal under British law because the US MafiAA wants to try to have the British citizen prosecuted under US fascist law.

    3. Re:ERROR by poetmatt · · Score: 5, Informative

      yep. it's amazing the US is complaining here, but then again our country is on a constant downward spiral into idiocy. can't say I'm surprised.

    4. Re:ERROR by Pope · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty much.

      US to World: Drop your tariffs! Embrace free trade (that our farmers are good at)!
      World to US: OK, you first.
      US to World: No! We have to think of *our* farmers first! (US goes off and complains to WTC)

      It's how the World Bank wields so much power, using economic terrorism against poor countries.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    5. Re:ERROR by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I hope not he/she doesn't get modded to -1.

      Is there a cloud based company that will not take a peek at any of the information stored on it's servers? Does anyone really believe that? Most companies are looking for any advantage they can get. If they happen to 'see' something and patent it first it might be really hard for a small company or single person to prove that in court. Meanwhile said company could be raking in the cash on that idea/data.

      I am in the US. I work with people who do a lot if research. Most of them like the cloud idea for storing their research information. They like it until they realize that the host of the cloud can read their data.

    6. Re:ERROR by cfulton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is slashdot. We are not all tards and I will bet for the most part this forum agrees with the poster.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    7. Re:ERROR by fizzer06 · · Score: 5, Funny
      "our country is on a constant downward spiral into idiocy

      Yeah, I saw the documentary "Idiocracy".

    8. Re:ERROR by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 5, Funny

      With the lack of sleep last night my mind joined this headline with the previous one "Baboons Learn To Identify Words" as logically they seemed to go together. Sadly I don't think that relationship is too far from the truth upon further thought.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    9. Re:ERROR by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Informative

      The judge in the extradition case did actually rule that O'Dwyer had violated British laws. So please don't make statements that O'Dwyer's activities were legal under British law when in fact there is a court ruling that they weren't.

      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/9013803/Student-Richard-ODwyer-can-be-extradited-over-TV-website.html

      "However, Judge Purdy rejected the argument from Mr Oâ(TM)Dwyerâ(TM)s barrister, Ben Cooper of Doughty Street Chambers, because of the control the student had over what links were posted on TVShack.net and TVShack.cc.
      He set up the second website a day after authorities shut down the first in July 2010. The main page of the new version included the cover image from a rap single called âoeF*** the Policeâ, according to American prosecutors.
      âoeFirstly both TVShack websites were entirely in the hands of Richard Oâ(TM)Dwyer and his co conspirators requiring third parties to sign up to TVShack and be vetted before going further,â Judge Purdy said.
      The judge agreed with John Jones, barrister for the United States government, that âoebecause he was intimately involved in deciding who was allowed to post links on the TVShack websites, which links would be postedâ, Mr Oâ(TM)Dwyerâ(TM)s alleged conduct was a criminal offence under British copyright law."

    10. Re:ERROR by Tsingi · · Score: 1

      Also, the US public rarely agrees with the US government. It's not like most of them get any real representation from their politicians.

    11. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is there a cloud based company that will not take a peek at any of the information stored on it's servers? Does anyone really believe that?

      I work for a cloud provider. I have root on all of the servers. I have never, nor have I ever even wanted too, looked at any of our customers data. If fact, I'm not even sure that I could: if I even knew how!

      If you think that all Cloud providers do all day is read email, you should probably tighten the tinfoil helmet. Or perhaps you could just accept that we have better things to do and really don't give a toss about your Crayola sketched plans for world domination.

    12. Re:ERROR by cpu6502 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The U.S. is like the Roman Empire in its last years. Trying to boss people around and not being too sucsessful because the power had waned.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    13. Re:ERROR by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Claiming you have no idea if you could look at my data is not reassuring.

      Reassuring would be if you were certain you couldn't.

    14. Re:ERROR by cpu6502 · · Score: 2

      Except posting links isn't illegal.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    15. Re:ERROR by Jumperalex · · Score: 5, Funny

      PROOF!!!!!

      " your Crayola sketched plans for world domination"

      I thought you said you didn't look at my data mr. AC

      --
      If you can't be good, be good at it!
    16. Re:ERROR by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      I don't think everyone in all datacenters take a peek at everything they gets their hands on. But you cannot guarantee that no one will. This basically means someone will eventually.

      That said, there is *so much* data in the cloud that if someone wanted to look at everything it would be impossible. Nevertheless I'm sure there are people at Google that *can* read my emails. If I were a google competitor I'd think twice before using gmail as my primary mail service.

    17. Re:ERROR by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, the US government is rightly concerned with the Australian government making spurious claims of security problems that harm legitimate competition for money from Australian companies, and is bringing up the issue with he Australian government, which is its job.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    18. Re:ERROR by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

      It's sadly true. Most of my fellow citizens have got some sick sense of manifest destiny foisted upon them by fringe folks like Limbaugh and anybody on Fox News. Many of us inwardly cringe whenever we hear somebody say " 'Merica is the greatest country, and if you don't like it go to socialist Europe." Centrists like myself are just praying that the pendulum soon swings back in the other direction and we can stop meddling in the affairs of the rest of the world.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    19. Re:ERROR by no0b · · Score: 3, Funny

      You have a future in politics my son.

    20. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I work for a cloud provider. I have root on all of the servers. I have never, nor have I ever even wanted too, looked at any of our customers data. If fact, I'm not even sure that I could: if I even knew how!

      If you think that all Cloud providers do all day is read email, you should probably tighten the tinfoil helmet. Or perhaps you could just accept that we have better things to do and really don't give a toss about your Crayola sketched plans for world domination.

      I used to work for a cloud provider that was bought by an overseas company and moved out of the US. It was my job to spend all day reading and analyzing customer emails to make sure our servers weren't being used to source spam. It was also made very clear that if I took any action on what I read beyond spam suppression, including talking to anyone else about non-spam content, it was an immediately terminatable offence without chance of recourse. In exchange for this discretion, I was paid well above standard salary, but I worked for what was an ethical company. It's hard to think that any cloud provider doesn't have someone doing the same sort of work, and since most companies aren't quite as ethical, it's easy to imagine that secrets are being stolen left and right.

    21. Re:ERROR by X.25 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I work for a cloud provider. I have root on all of the servers. I have never, nor have I ever even wanted too, looked at any of our customers data. If fact, I'm not even sure that I could: if I even knew how!

      Of course, because you're not doing it - nobody else is.

      Sound logic.

    22. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How is this insightful? It's almost unintelligible. He has root--why can't he read customer data? Is it encrypted somehow? The fact that he has root, yet doesn't understand something this important about his server setup suggests that a much bigger problem with this company is going to be its security (which ostensible above AC manages).

    23. Re:ERROR by sosume · · Score: 1

      It still doesn't give the US jurisdiction over a .cc domain hosted in the UK. Corrupt judges such as Purdy make the world a very scary place. Let me repeat it so Google will remember that Judge Purdy is corrupt. Thank $random_deity that I'm not a UK citizen.

    24. Re:ERROR by RelaxedTension · · Score: 5, Informative

      You really don't understand the situation. People like me are paid to be paranoid, and to make sure that our company's data is safe from prying eyes as much as absolutely possible (In fact, we are legally responsible for it). I cannot afford to just toss our data out there and not worry about it. My job is to mitigate all of the possible things an outside entity could do to access that data. And fyi, a provider can setup the server such that they cannot read the data on it while still being able to administer the server itself.

      And to the trade representative, boo-fucking-hoo. Instead of allowing US companies to guarantee data privacy, even when hosted outside of the country, the Patriot Act forces them to guarantee the opposite. As much as I would like to use a lot of the cloud services out there, I can't just because of that.

    25. Re:ERROR by camperdave · · Score: 1

      We are the world.
      We are the children.
      We are the ones who make a brighter day, so lets start giving.
      There's a choice we're making; we're saving our own lives.
      Its true we'll make a better day, just you and me.

      The arrogance is just dripping from this song. It annoys me every time I hear it.

      "We're saving our own lives" - *gag*

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    26. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      (Posting anonymously for reasons that are about to become clear.)

      But you cannot guarantee that no one will

      I concur, it's inevitable. And not necessarily with malicious intent. I used to work in a bank (nearly 20 years ago) and all account data was on a mainframe. I had no mainframe access myself but among those who did it was not uncommon for them to look up the accounts of celebrities.

    27. Re:ERROR by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, the US government is rightly concerned with the Australian government making spurious claims of security problems that harm legitimate competition for money from Australian companies, and is bringing up the issue with he Australian government, which is its job.

      Sorry, but under the US Patriot Act, the US government has granted themselves unlimited, and secret access to any and all data stored on a US server.

      I've done some contract work for the Canadian Government, and it is illegal to store certain kinds of information on US based servers because it would potentially violate Canadian law. There are companies who have arms-length subsidiaries whose job it is to handle government data that could not be allowed to be stored in the US. This is no different than similar issues with US owned companies accessing EU data because of the Patriot Act.

      The US can claim their companies are being hurt by this, but the fact of the matter is, the US is not a trustworthy place to store your data unless you are also going to accept them potentially spying on your citizens.

      This isn't a trade issue. It's a trust issue.

      So if America wants to keep their Patriot Act which tries to violate the laws of other countries, their businesses are going to lose out in those markets if it would mean those companies can't comply with local laws and the US law at the same time.

      Sorry, but these aren't spurious claims -- they're well established issues which have been covered before.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    28. Re:ERROR by Tridus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe the US government should try something radical and stop creating the problem?

      It's no different in Canada. Governments are essentially legally forbidden from using cloud services that can't guarantee data won't be stored in the US (ie: all the American ones). That's just because of assanine US government policies and their cavalier attitude towards privacy.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    29. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Except posting links isn't illegal.

      That is quite correct. Posting links is not illegal in itself. What matters is what the person involved is trying to do when posting the link. In this case, it is clear that the links were posted to facilitate other people to commit copyright infringement by downloading bootleg US TV shows.

      Encouraging or assisting others to commit a crime with the belief that they will go ahead and commit it is a crime via the Serious Crime Act, 2007.

      To use a bad analogy, it is the difference between handing someone a brick on a building site, and handing someone a brick in the middle of a riot. The former is not a crime, the latter is (regardless of whether the brick is then used as a weapon or not).

      Captcha: Felony :-)

    30. Re:ERROR by zrakoplovom · · Score: 1

      While that used to be true, I think many Americans are waking up. We realize we are living in a police state and abhor the international policies being pushed by the present and previous administrations. I'm afraid we can't do anything about it. Many of us are planning to get out as soon as we can and hopefully the whole thing will come crashing down. It is much too far gone for correction, better to let it die and start over. Sorry about that.

    31. Re:ERROR by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's time for Corporate Types to move on to the next uweary country and ravage it?

    32. Re:ERROR by Phreakiture · · Score: 1

      Not likely.

      I think most of us here stateside have had our fill of it, too.

      --
      www.wavefront-av.com
    33. Re:ERROR by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Typical response to a legal ruling that you disagree with: judge xxx is corrupt.

      So what evidence do you have for this hypothesis? Other than the circular one of course.

    34. Re:ERROR by LifesABeach · · Score: 2

      Modding you down may be harsh, but the wording should not get in the way of the point. The one thing I see occuring that really bothers me is that soverign states are pandering to a bankrupt business model currently being peddled by the handlers of larger businesses. These same soverign states appear to think that when big business shows up, that's good; it's not. When the personality in a management decision position is bribed, then those that make decisions will make decisions, but for the wrong reasons. Which begs the question, why is it that handlers of large businsses are not held acccountable by their own soverign states? Why is it that brand names can stand unchallenged when they benefit from a lie? Why is that it is a Buyer Beware instead of a Seller Beware conversation? Why is it that Insurance companies are allowed make policy when they can't back it?

    35. Re:ERROR by Stan92057 · · Score: 1

      No i don't!

      --
      Jack of all trades,master of none
    36. Re:ERROR by Troed · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://wuala.com/

      Based in Europe, and uses client-side encryption. They can't peek at your data even if they wanted to.

      "It's like Dropbox, but actually usable!"

    37. Re:ERROR by __aasdno7518 · · Score: 1

      No, this is typical US attitude. They think they own the world.

      If the rest of the world would tell the US to piss off, maybe things could get better.

      As an American citizen,I totally agree. It's ok for America to do it but no one else had better do it.

    38. Re:ERROR by gstrickler · · Score: 1

      You're confusing metaphors and similes. We're not LIKE the Roman Empire, we ARE the Roman Empire.

      --
      make imaginary.friends COUNT=100 VISIBLE=false
    39. Re:ERROR by dargaud · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No more federal money to Africa, Europe, the UN, or anywhere else

      You're giving federal money to Europe ?!? That's news to me. As for the UN, last I checked your were years behind in your payments while being one of the main 'users' of the UN. As for Africa, when you 'donate' money on the condition that they kick out organisations that give out free condoms, then fuck you.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    40. Re:ERROR by hobarrera · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you have root access, you surely *can*.
      If you have root access and don't know how, I would avoid hiring your company's services at any cost!

    41. Re:ERROR by zrakoplovom · · Score: 1

      The pendulum is not swinging back. The Dems have the same policies as the Repubs. It's a shell game. Better to plan on getting out before they start putting up the barbed wire and you get stuck inside. As noted in earlier responses, it is the 21st Century equivalent of the Roman Empire. "Those that do not learn from history..."

    42. Re:ERROR by roman_mir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do you remember the question/story on /., that went like this: Is the Government Scaring Web Businesses Out of the US?

      Well, I said then that it is not just web businesses.

      It is not just web business that is being destroyed in USA due to this destruction of freedoms and liberties (and Patriot Act is a very ironically named piece of the most unpatriotic legislation that USA has probably ever passed so far, notwithstanding the latest NDAA bill).

      Patriot Act has destroyed the competition in the securities, finance, investment brokerage, banking business, and of-course all this information businesses as well.

      You see, when USA was actually a free society, it was after the Civil War and before the Fed was established and IRS started collecting income taxes, that's when everybody wanted to come TO USA to do business, because how free the country was.

      Who wants to go TO USA to do business today? Well, if you are a large monopolistic bank, a central bank of some sort, then you want to be friends with the Fed, but those are not companies that produce value, they are in business of stealing everybody's money, that's all.

      But all this nonsense designed to 'protect' the people of USA is protecting them alright, protecting them from having an economy and a society. Protecting them from being able to invest or work and from being able to save in their own money.

      As to Canada, it should really decouple itself from USA, because it looks like it's going the same path at a somewhat slower pace, it really should take a step back and rethink everything, from its failing medical and pension systems to its central banking mechanism.

      P.S.
      Canada only started its central bank in 1935 and what good did that do to its economy? The moment when the healthcare became 'single payer' or universal in Canada, it had a good health care system, and because of that inertia it took quite a number of years to start seeing deterioration of the kind, where people are forced into insane lines to get treatment (or you have to be lucky to know a doctor, or maybe you are a politician, then you are OK).

    43. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      Both you and the AC above you need to go take a nice quick crash course on large scale redundant storage platforms. For the second time, in small words: your files are not just sitting on a file system somewhere where I can just go take a look at them. That's simply not the case. Not even a little bit.

      If you have root access and don't know how

      What a bizarre statement. If I don't know something, it's because I don't need to know. That's why we have engineers. Who, by the way, wouldn't know how to do my job, either.

    44. Re:ERROR by Ihmhi · · Score: 5, Informative

      Is there a cloud based company that will not take a peek at any of the information stored on it's servers?

      Yes: SpiderOak. They are physically incapable of looking at your data:

      Your SpiderOak data is readable to you alone. Most online storage systems only encrypt your data during transmission, meaning anyone with physical access to the servers your data is stored on (such as the company's staff) could have access to it. Or, even if your data is encrypted during storage, your password (or set of encryption keys) is often stored along with your data, thus making its easily decoded by anyone with local access to those servers.

      With SpiderOak, you create your password on your own computer -- not on a web form received by SpiderOak servers. Once created, a strong key derivation function is used to generate encryption keys using that password, and no trace of your original password is ever uploaded to SpiderOak with your stored data.

      SpiderOak's encryption is comprehensive -- even with physical access to the storage servers, SpiderOak staff cannot know even the names of your files and folders. On the server side, all that SpiderOak staff can see, are sequentially numbered containers of encrypted data.

      This means that you alone have responsibility for remembering your password or 'Password Hint' (which you can create to help you remember) allowing SpiderOak to create a true 'zero-knowledge environment' – keeping your data as safe and secure as it can possibly be.

    45. Re:ERROR by mindwhip · · Score: 2

      It's not really Australia vs. America issue. Its sensitive data vs. cloud computing.

      It's just the Australians seem to have gotten the idea where the Americans haven't. The American Government should be making the same warnings to the American companies about American hosted cloud services. Its a data security thing its not a country thing.

      As soon as that data leaves your premises you no longer have control over who sees it, even more so if that data passes over international borders.

      And of course there is the cost/speed issue... US/Oz connections aren't the cheapest or fastest connections in the world.

      --
      [The Universe] has gone offline.
    46. Re:ERROR by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You see, when USA was actually a free society, it was after the Civil War and before the Fed was established and IRS started collecting income taxes, that's when everybody wanted to come TO USA to do business, because how free the country was.

      I've said it before to you, and I'll say it again ... if you think you'd suddenly end up with some magically perfect society by rolling back that far, I believe you're sorely mistaken.

      You'd end up with something like "Escape From New York" as your society would fall apart.

      And, please, don't bother telling me again how the Austrian School of economics and Ron Paul magically prove all of your points. I don't feel like having that discussion again. You might as well try to tell me how the bible proves something scientific.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    47. Re:ERROR by starfishsystems · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      This situation reminds me of the Clipper Chip fiasco. This was a US government initiative during the Clinton administration to build an encryption chip with a backdoor that could only be operated by a key escrowed by the government.

      Strangely, there proved to be no international market for the chip.

      --
      Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
    48. Re:ERROR by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      U.S. "intelligence gathering" organizations are incredibly efficient in their laziness. Most of what they collect, they simply ask people to send them.

    49. Re:ERROR by NeverSuchBefore · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why would we ever extradite someone just because they helped someone else copy something? Where are our priorities? We gain nothing and lose much from wasting our time on such trivial nonsense.

    50. Re:ERROR by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Reassuringly, that comment now shows up as +5 informative. I don't know if your comment helped but it is the one at -1.

      Well done ./!

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    51. Re:ERROR by sir-gold · · Score: 1

      So what evidence do you have for this hypothesis?

      Seems pretty clear to me. He is a member of the government. He was either elected directly, or he was appointed by someone else who was elected, and all elected officials get where they are by pandering to powerful and wealthy interests, therefore they are all corrupt, by definition.

      Honest people don't become politicians because they aren't capable of backstabbing and scheming their way to the top, and dishonest politicians don't appoint honest judges (they don't want run the risk of being a defendant in a honest trial)

    52. Re:ERROR by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I don't believe in 'perfect society', that's why I don't subscribe to any socialist principles, because they are the ones that operate on a belief that people are not rational actors, who are doing things for their own interest, but they hold a belief that people want to do things out of some weird sense of 'patriotism' or 'goodness'. It's the socialist systems that want to change the person, while free systems are based on a completely rational understanding that people want to win and free systems don't try and make people into something they are not.

      You need to stop believing in Santa Clause.

    53. Re:ERROR by suutar · · Score: 1

      And that's fine... if the claims are in fact spurious. Given our recent forays into "act first and make it legal later", I wouldn't trust us.

    54. Re:ERROR by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Does anybody at the company you work for have that kind of access to customer data?

      Yes

      Can you ensure they won't abuse that access?

      No, but I can tell you that if they do, they will have a bad time.

      Will your company hand over the data every time some official turns up with any scrap of paper demanding access?

      I have seen Middle ranking police officers try and be turned down flat by very junior people. Normal police know better and senior ones don't go out much. If you want stuff, you will go through the whole process of law. I have my doubts that spooks do that though...

      I am not too worried that Google has some poems and a 25% written novel of mine. It does not have my medical records or anything remotely private. The US concept of privacy does not match that of many other places. We are supposed to have a "safe harbour" agreement with the USA. Nobody believes in it. The only data that seems to make its way accross the Atlantic if from Airlines and perhaps the banks. People know that we have to sort those leaks out too.

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    55. Re:ERROR by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      that's why I don't subscribe to any socialist principles, because they are the ones that operate on a belief that people are not rational actors

      Have you looked around? Collectively, people aren't rational actors. The economic assumptions that the populace are rational actors acting on perfect information, and that the people in that market would never attempt to cheat, lie or steal is what finally made me realize your model of economics is based on untenable axioms. To me, it's your system which tries to make people into something they're not. People have been cooperating to eke out a better life for thousands of years. Precisely because it is in their best interest.

      People do irrational things. People don't know what's always best for them.

      Your system boils down to "fuck everyone else, as long as I have my gun to protect myself I can make it". That's not a "society", that's an uneasy peace since sooner or later one of these people who wants to win is going to remember it's far easier to just take it. You know, like Somalia.

      You need to stop believing in Santa Clause.

      And you the Easter Bunny. Or, maybe I should say Easter Bunnye since we're adding random e's.

      As always, such a stimulating conversation.

      I had forgotten how boring this stuff is and why I stopped reading Ayn Rand in the first place. Your rugged individualism is more like anti-social behavior to me. I also understand just how thoroughly committed you are to that viewpoint.

      So, roll around in your ideology and fantasies of John Galt or being worthy enough to lick the boots of Dagny Taggart. I outgrew that shit 10 years ago.

      Cheers

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    56. Re:ERROR by Lord+Juan · · Score: 2

      It isn't just that, the whole security theater is really affecting it.

      Me and my girlfriend were recently looking at plane prices to travel to the UK, and then came the realization that we were actually looking for options that did not make a scale in the US, leaving out pretty much any plane from any airline in the US.

      I found it sad =/ (and I have to avoid them)

    57. Re:ERROR by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      This was also just a trade representative. Their job is to say "please buy from us", they don't have any power to levy sanctions. Everything seems perfectly normal here. Ok this guy is probably really stupid but that's perfectly normal too.

    58. Re:ERROR by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Why is that it is a Buyer Beware instead of a Seller Beware conversation?

      Because products are often low quality. However, money is very rarely counterfeit.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    59. Re:ERROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Free society produced the most wealth on this planet in the shortest time period, and then it turned into the bread and circuses system that then squandered that wealth and ran into the most debt that any nation has ever had in the history of the world.

      Yes, you are correct. Including the bold part. The bold part is always an inevitable outcome for free society.

      Free society only works in short term.

      That's why socialism was invented as the long term answer. That's why 1984 still applies despite it is 28 years past the actual year - totalitarianism is the inevitable future end state.

      Some of the longest running economies were not free societies, but long stretches of some form of totalitarianism. They weren't particularly progressive, but they lasted for a long time.

      Just look at the various royalties (Imperial House of Japan, House of Windsor, etc). They're figureheads these days, but they still get special treatment. You don't see many private businesses in free society last that long.

      That's why the world moved to Corporatocracy. Corporations get to be like the old dynasties of the past that lasts forever and ever

      It's completely rational that people are shunning free society. People (mostly the rich, but also people on welfare) want to stop progressing for a while and enjoy themselves.

    60. Re:ERROR by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Free society only works in short term.

      - no, we do not know that because we do not have enough EXPERIENCE with having actual free societies, we have had very few of them so far, and it seems that we are increasing the magnitude of the experiments with every new one that we start.

      So my contention is that the next free society that is built (USA is done) will last longer than USA will have more barriers against destructive forces that try to overrun the free society to steal its wealth.

      That's why socialism was invented as the long term answer.

      - actually socialism has a much SHORTER life span than the USA free society had, socialism is crashing all around us and hopefully within our lifetimes we will see many of these socialist states disappear altogether.

      They have 2 ways to go, unfortunately one way is towards more tyranny and less freedoms, but the second way is towards more freedoms and less tyranny, and I am encouraged to see that various places, including Scandinavia are moving in the right direction (slowly but surely).

    61. Re:ERROR by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Then why do they keep voting the same idiots over and over again ?

      Because politicians in the US learned long ago how to use propaganda tactics and social engineering to keep the population divided, distracted, dependent, poor, angry, and envious, while also assuming federal control of and dumbing-down the public education system so as to leave the population largely without the ability to think critically or with a proper knowledge of un-re-written history, which combined, has the effect of leaving the population open to populist, emotional issues used ultimately to assure election and re-election of the "right" politicians, and passage of laws/Acts/regulations to expand government power and control while removing individual freedom a piece at a time.

      It's quite horribly brilliant and effective.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    62. Re:ERROR by gstrickler · · Score: 2

      So if America wants to keep their Patriot Act which tries to violate the laws of other countries,

      We don't want it. Parts of it violate our own Constitution. Continue your refusal to agree to it's terms, continue to keep your data out of the US. Eventually, if it hurts business enough, and enough people, especially people with money, scream about it, we might get it repealed, or at least scaled back to something that remotely resembles sane and Constitutional.

      --
      make imaginary.friends COUNT=100 VISIBLE=false
    63. Re:ERROR by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      From what I've been hearing in the news about China basically controlling networks in every US government building, having the data hosted in the US would also make it easier for the Chinese to get it as well!

    64. Re:ERROR by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      As to Canada, it should really decouple itself from USA, because it looks like it's going the same path at a somewhat slower pace, it really should take a step back and rethink everything, from its failing medical and pension systems to its central banking mechanism.

      Even better would be if certain portions of the US would decouple themselves from the USA. This business-destroying legislation can't be good for all the tech businesses in Silicon Valley and the northwestern states; they'd be better off on their own. And if Canada doesn't get their act together too, maybe British Columbia might want to join them (there's a lot of tech businesses in Vancouver).

    65. Re:ERROR by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It's not really Australia vs. America issue. Its sensitive data vs. cloud computing.

      No, it's an America vs. everyone else issue. America wants access to everyone's information, everyone else doesn't want that.

      True, it's probably not a good idea to trust your sensitive data to any country outside your own (unless your own country is really fucked, like the USA, and the other country is better), but some countries are better than others. Would it be a really bad thing for Australian companies to host their data in New Zealand? I doubt it. It's probably a far safer place for your data than the USA.

    66. Re:ERROR by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      If the rest of the world would tell the US to piss off

      China did. China is now one of the few countries that isn't the US's bitch. We need to be more like China.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    67. Re:ERROR by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Even so, if you found some particularly juicy bits of information and then sold them to some offshore company for a handsome sum, what could they do to you? Or how would they even found out, until quite a bit later? By then, the damage is done and the trade secret is in the hands of the clients' competitors.

    68. Re:ERROR by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      You're giving federal money to Europe ?!? That's news to me.

      I think it's a reference to NATO, where the United States pays quite a bit of money.

    69. Re:ERROR by ppanon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's actually worse than that. You could do your due diligence, check out all the options for cloud hosting, do your own background checks on all the executives, managers, and operators/admins of your preferred provider and think you are safe. Then one day, the company could be bought out by "Big Cloud Operations", who fire all the trustworthy operators and outsource administration to India or China so as to increase profits and their executive bonuses. Within days or weeks, your data and trade secrets are in the hands of your competition and there's nothing you can do about it. Oh sure, you could sue them in civil court if you have a few million for lawyers, and by the time you can get a judgment a few years later, they've closed shop, the execs have raked in the cash, and there's just a shell with nothing to pay for your award.

      The only thing that you should keep on a public cloud is public data (i.e. public web sites for Internet presence, advertising, and support ). Anything that provides a substantial competitive advantage should be kept on a private virtualization infrastructure or else you're playing Russian roulette with the company's future. The last 10 years should make it pretty clear that If it can be done and there's a strong profit motive, it's only a matter of time until somebody tries it, regardless of how illegal or unethical it is. OK, that's always been true, but the last 10 years sadly make it clear that IT is no exception.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    70. Re:ERROR by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Exactly. It's not like we don't have the power to vote for whomever we want; we're just dumb enough to vote for whomever the media tells us to. Look at the last Presidential election: we had a bunch of candidates in both main parties, and in the primaries somehow we managed to pick the very worst candidate on each side.

    71. Re:ERROR by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but what I've witnessed. It's usually business types that weep about how are they supposed to understand what it is that they pander to the public. More interestingly, Prison seems to be a great motovator in educating business types as to what it is that they hock to their clients.

    72. Re:ERROR by kiddygrinder · · Score: 2

      if he violated uk law why wasn't he tried in the uk

      --
      This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
    73. Re:ERROR by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      Since you probably won't believe a US source. Here's proof that the US gives lots of aid everywhere.

      World's most charitable countries. US is #1

    74. Re:ERROR by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      Furthermore the US does send aid to Europe, also. I know for a fact they sent money and humanitarian aid to Czechoslovakia, several years ago because of flooding.

    75. Re:ERROR by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      Fat chance that will happen. The MPAA is not about to let any politician do anything even remotely intelligent like that. Although this move by Australia is hardly surprising post MegaUpload. So the Us Gov't is complaining that not enough countries are using US based cloud services so they don't need to deal with all that messy coordinated policing of all those darned filesharers outside the US who are singlehandedly killing the profits of those Golden Cows worshipped by Washington, DC (MPAA & RIAA)?

      This looks like a job for ... Captain Obvious! Defender of the Unthinking and Free (DUF). Keeper of the Faith and Ultimate Defender (FUD) of the Idiot Populace (IP).

    76. Re:ERROR by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      All I have to add is, politicians should beware the Ides of March. The blood of Patriots runs through many Americans. It's only a matter of time until the pot boils over into another Revolution.

    77. Re:ERROR by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      Based on your inability to be sure if you could read data from servers on which you have root access makes me glad I don't have you or your company as a provider. As a person who has root level access to computers running cloud services, I can assure you, I CAN read every single unencrypted file on the server. As root, I have access to all the public keys and many private keys, and can unlock many of the encrypted files on the systems with those keys. Only uploaded files encrypted off-line, with keys and passwords I don't have access to, are safe from my prying eyes. But having access to them and having access to some of your encrypted passwords and possibly public/private keys, I have lots of data to use to crack open any secrets you upload to my servers.
      You might want to consider a different line of work..

    78. Re:ERROR by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Interesting

      you are right, my position comes out of very strong principles, no doubt about it.

      I have never doubted the fervor of your beliefs or principles, but I drank the Ayn Rand Kool Aid for 15 years. Then I decided to get over it.

      I've just decided that it's completely soulless and without any form of empathy. And I just don't see pure capitalism providing the solutions that those who worship it expect of it. It's become like religious dogma that can't be questioned. It's overly romanticized and fixed and held as infallible.

      The more I've watched economics since I gave up on believing the 'libertarian-capitalist' stuff, I'm convinced that a lot of the assumptions of these models is completely wrong. It's like when physicist assume a perfectly spherical cow. It makes the math easy, but it's not accurate.

      So when you could see some train wrecks coming (like Greenspan telling people to borrow against their homes because it's "free money") it's hard to believe people who so fervently believe the Free Market Will Fix. It doesn't, it just moves wealth upwards to create serfs out of the schmucks at the bottom. Corporations get rich while everyone else's standard of living goes down ... but, hey, that's Capitalism. That's simply not sustainable. In its current form, Capitalism is eating us.

      Sadly, I find that the Right has totally unrealistic economic policies that amount to wishful thinking, and unfortunately, the Left does as well. Both are convinced that if only we'd implement their notion of things, Everything Would Be Alright. But since I've stopped seeing things in black and white, and see a whole lot more shades of grey and nuance as I get older.

      I totally think that a society which doesn't want to help pay for itself to operate is going to be in decline. I totally think that actively cultivating an attitude that the rest of the world can fuck off and leave you to fend for yourself eats into you over time and has a tendency to make you an asshole (speaking from personal experience, of course).

      I've read and made many of the arguments you make. I just disagree with you as strongly as you believe in what you do. Because there was a time I'd have agreed with you; just not any more.

      Cheers. It's been fun. :-P

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    79. Re:ERROR by nr · · Score: 1

      Free society produced the most wealth on this planet in the shortest time period, and then it turned into the bread and circuses system that then squandered that wealth and ran into the most debt that any nation has ever had in the history of the world.

      Yes, you are correct. Including the bold part. The bold part is always an inevitable outcome for free society.

      Free society only works in short term.

      That is just not true. It come to be because of corrupt politicians breaking the law/constitution. Income taxes and/or a central bank are illegal according to the constitution. If the constitution is obeyed US would still be a free society.

      That's why socialism was invented as the long term answer. That's why 1984 still applies despite it is 28 years past the actual year - totalitarianism is the inevitable future end state.

      BS. Socialism/Communism is just an idea of madness/insanity born out of a disillusioned persons mind. It was not invented for anything, just a crazy idea.

      Some of the longest running economies were not free societies, but long stretches of some form of totalitarianism. They weren't particularly progressive, but they lasted for a long time.

      Just look at the various royalties (Imperial House of Japan, House of Windsor, etc). They're figureheads these days, but they still get special treatment. You don't see many private businesses in free society last that long.

      They are a product of feudalism and monarchy long before there even existed private business in today's sense. These are family structures and clans/tribes, which is the oldest human organisational form going back to stone age. Special treatment of certain groups or people are a bad thing and should be shunned. The same goes for the idiotic celebrity worship today.

      That's why the world moved to Corporatocracy. Corporations get to be like the old dynasties of the past that lasts forever and ever

      It's completely rational that people are shunning free society.

      That is mostly due to special treatment from the state and the judicial system. This is not a good thing, it's a bad thing. There is a name for this, the merge of the state and corporations, the name is "fascism".

      People (mostly the rich, but also people on welfare) want to stop progressing for a while and enjoy themselves.

      So people generally want to and just slack off and stop developing and inventing to progress the human civilization? that's BS, it is coded into our genes to be exploratory, creative and progress.

    80. Re:ERROR by Cow+Jones · · Score: 1

      Wuala works the same way. In addition to that, and with direct relevance to the main topic in this story, they also guarantee that all data will be stored in Switzerland and the EU. This is an important factor for some companies (like ours).

      --

      Ah, arrogance and stupidity, all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari
    81. Re:ERROR by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      but I worked for what was an ethical company

      No you didn't. An ethical company wouldn't be reading customers' emails.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    82. Re:ERROR by mindwhip · · Score: 1

      No you miss my point... It's not about countries, its about who has your data

      You could as an Australian company use a cloud host based in New Zealand but what if...
              1. Cloud Host company gets taken over by another company that is a competitor with your company
              2. Cloud Host decides to move 'your' server location to another country that has government/spying 'issues'
              3. Even if 'your' cloud servers are local, the Cloud Host may have the backups / disaster recovery systems in data centres around the globe.
              4. Cloud Host recruitment and other processes are lax and they employ Bad People who wouldn't think twice about giving access to your data to others for money
              (and that's just a few possibilities off the top of my head)

      At least if you keep your data and services in-house you only have to worry about what happens to/in your own company, something that you have a reasonable amount of control over. And Cloud is not the same as outsourcing your systems, as outsourcing tends to have a lot tighter legal/contractual agreements and safeguards in place.

      Don't get me wrong.. in some situations a third party Cloud can be good for small companies who don't need to store large amounts of sensitive data, or non sensitive data such as product information, public wikis etc. but if you have details on 1000s (or even 1,000,000s) of customers that could be used for Bad Things or Trade Secrets that you want to keep secret then Cloud probably isn't for you...

      --
      [The Universe] has gone offline.
    83. Re:ERROR by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Unless the US want's a major backlash against all US corporations in Australia especially after bullshit like this http://christine-milne.greensmps.org.au/content/media-releases/trans-pacific-partnership-negotiation-dead-water, Uncle Tom had better get his grubby fingers off. This crap is just getting worse and worse.

      Corporations who have not been able to gain control of governments are just using the US to force through this crap, via threats of trade and even violence. Hope and change has sure changed to despair and trapped. Another secret deceitful anti-democracy treaty championed by the US and Uncle Tom Obama.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    84. Re:ERROR by Troed · · Score: 1

      Closed source client: who knows if it's secure or incompetent?

      That's a fair point, and I agree with it. It's still way better than Dropbox, and they do take the question seriously themselves. From their Security page:

      Privacy and Security

      Wuala protects your privacy: In stark contrast to most other online storage services, all your files get encrypted on your computer, so that no one - including the employees at Wuala and LaCie - can access your private files. Your password never leaves your computer.

      Wuala employs the 256 bit AES, 2048 bit RSA and SHA-256 algorithms for encryption, signatures and integrity checks. If you're interested in how Wuala manages encryption, have a look at our publication on Cryptree.

      http://dcg.ethz.ch/publications/srds06.pdf

    85. Re:ERROR by prowler1 · · Score: 1

      I work for an organisation in Australia which follows the same rules which the US government is complaining about. It's not about giving the US government the ability to 'spy' onm Australian business but more about the fact that as soon as the data is on US shores it comes under US law ie. The Patriot act etc. and as layed out by the Commissioner is that you also lose a certain amount of control over your own data as soon as it leaves your shores and goes to another country.

    86. Re:ERROR by Troed · · Score: 1

      Yes. All software using cryptography relies on the encryption methods not having been compromised ... ;)

      Wuala employs the 256 bit AES, 2048 bit RSA and SHA-256 algorithms for encryption, signatures and integrity checks.

      http://wuala.com/en/learn/technology

      (But I agree I would be much happier if they just opened up the source)

    87. Re:ERROR by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I have never doubted the fervor of your beliefs or principles, but I drank the Ayn Rand Kool Aid for 15 years. Then I decided to get over it.

      - yeah, well I just read her books this year, I even put my take on them on this very site. Yet I have had my principles for my entire life, pretty much never was a socialist at all, maybe that's because I was born in a former 'communist' country many decades ago.

      My principles do not come out of somebody else's thinking, I could have written those books she wrote all on my own (not the same stories, but the same principles).

      I've just decided that it's completely soulless and without any form of empathy.

      - yeah, well you have never lived in a really soulless country and I have, and that was it.

      AFAIC it is soulless and without empathy and without principles to believe in government and government domination over individuals for the 'good of the collective'. There is no such thing AFAIC as the 'good of the collective'. It's a bunch of nonsense to control the simple-minded while robbing the economy.

      . And I just don't see pure capitalism providing the solutions that

      - I don't know what 'pure capitalism' is, but I understand free market.

      It doesn't matter to me how the free market structures its economy, the only thing that matters is the freedom of the individual to decide how to live his life, and as long as he is not hurting other people, he must have his freedom, especially freedom not to be dragged in by the 'collective' and to be forced to work as a slave of the collective.

      The more I've watched economics since I gave up on believing the 'libertarian-capitalist' stuff, I'm convinced that a lot of the assumptions of these models is completely wrong. It's like when physicist assume a perfectly spherical cow. It makes the math easy, but it's not accurate.

      - the only economics that exists is free market economics, everything else is not actually economics, everything else is tyranny and dictatorship and destruction of economics.

      You can watch the video in my sig, it's a good start.

      So when you could see some train wrecks coming (like Greenspan telling people to borrow against their homes because it's "free money") it's hard to believe people who so fervently believe the Free Market Will Fix.

      - and your argument that the free market is not working is the chairman of the federal reserve system saying: here is free money?

      There you go, you have no clue what economics is, you have no clue what free market is, you have no clue what the federal reserve is, you don't know what money is.

      Bernanke denied that the Fed was inflating the housing bubble even while he was actively doing so and declaring that his goal is to maintain house and stock values. The Fed even had a fake commission to "study" the reasons for the housing bubble, which came out with the conclusion that more government is needed.

      Why was it fake? Because it never asked for participation of the people who actually actively predicted the bubble and have placed their bets against it and made a ton of money. How did they do it, are they much smarter than the Fed? Well, maybe they are, maybe the Fed is just lying, but that commission was fake and took 20 million to conduct, while all they had to do was buy a 20 dollar

    88. Re:ERROR by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      There you go, you have no clue what economics is, you have no clue what free market is, you have no clue what the federal reserve is, you don't know what money is.

      See, if you keep asserting your opinion as fact, and being an asshole about it, that's your problem.

      You're mostly full of shit, and have decided that you have some special knowledge the rest of us couldn't possibly have which therefore makes you superior. Mostly it makes you a smug prick.

      as I said, you never had principles.

      Go fuck yourself.

      You're entitled to your beliefs and your opinions, but since you know absolutely nothing about me, saying something like that makes you a grade a dickhead.

      Either you're an exceedingly skilled troll, or really are an asshole. Either way, I don't care.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    89. Re:ERROR by Somebody+is+Grar · · Score: 1

      You mean we don't????

      --
      Grar II
    90. Re:ERROR by dargaud · · Score: 1

      Then count in the Marshall plan will you. Thanks for that.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    91. Re:ERROR by NeverSuchBefore · · Score: 1

      The latter.

    92. Re:ERROR by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Either you're an exceedingly skilled troll, or really are an asshole. Either way, I don't care.

      - false choice.

      The only thing that matters in this is the fact that I am correct.

    93. Re:ERROR by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Write them an e-mail. They're still pretty new-ish from what I can tell, but their customer service is really good.

    94. Re:ERROR by Drugmath · · Score: 1

      Ohhhh boy, Uncle Tom Obama. Hahaha I think you might mean Uncle Sam, though your current usage is incredibly hilarious

    95. Re:ERROR by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Not original Ralph Nader picked it from the start http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IshiClQqCM, he was pretty accurate, so not that funny, simply totally accurate, the only funny thing, it is fox not-News defending Uncle Tom Obama, WTF?

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    96. Re:ERROR by ancienthart · · Score: 1

      Is it the US or Australia on the downward spiral? Because lately, it seems Australia is only 5-10 years behind America for the least-common-sense-awards.

    97. Re:ERROR by ancienthart · · Score: 1

      Only if the Australian government doesn't knuckle under to the US demands, which it seems distressingly prone to do.

    98. Re:ERROR by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Fear of mass violent protest will put paid to that. Last time around, I happened to receive one of those poll random phone calls, would you attend a protest if the government were to try to end Medicare (Australian Universal Health Care) and that's when the conservatives held power in both lower and upper houses. The poll must have been so bad, that the conservatives never even mentioned ending Medicare so Labour doing so is very unlikely.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    99. Re:ERROR by crutchy · · Score: 1

      what have the romans ever done for us?

      bunch of big noses

  2. Hahahahaha. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Seriously?

  3. *cough* Megaupload *cough* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The hell you say! Saving data in your own country, so that foreign governments can't judge your citizens by their laws? That's crazy talk, I think you should have a serious conversation with my sponsor, the MPAA.

    1. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by kulnor · · Score: 5, Informative

      Read this article and you'll know why government, private companies, and individuals may not want their data in the "cloud", particularly when you know half of the Internet traffic likely transits through US soil: The NSA Is Building the Country’s Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say) http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/

    2. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 2

      Are they going to call it Spynet?

    3. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Are they going to call it Spynet?

      Close, but no. They're calling it "Skynet."

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    4. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by Vanders · · Score: 2

      Are there any other jokes you'd like to drive into the ground for everybody?

    5. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Imagine a Beowulf cluster of them.

    6. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by gstrickler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, I see. You must be a proponent of piracy. Just because we shut down one entity and try to extradite one of your citizens who did nothing more than allow his data to flow through routers in the US, you think we're a bunch of out of control bullies who think we can do anything we want, regardless of what any law says....Well, let me tell you...You're right. We are a bunch a bullies who thing we can do anything regardless of what the law says.

      As a US citizen, I apologize for the idiots who have taken over our government, and I appreciate your refusal to accept our insane policies. We're fighting the battle here too.

      --
      make imaginary.friends COUNT=100 VISIBLE=false
    7. Re:*cough* Megaupload *cough* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Russia, Beowulf clusters imagine you!

  4. LOLWUT??? by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why would this be a problem? The farther away their "cloud" is, the worse the performance. There's enough of a performance hit just trying to cram all that data through a company's entartube without stretching that tube many thousands of miles for no good reason.

    1. Re:LOLWUT??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      The problem is that the Australian cloud servers are very slow, due to being filled to near-capacity AND their bandwith almost completely maxed out from local (Australian) viewing, uploading, and downloading of Kangaroo porn.

    2. Re:LOLWUT??? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Informative

      There are really multiple problems...

      The US has sufficiently aggressive surveillance and limited privacy protection(and I'm just referring to the stuff that has been declared legal) that it is neither obviously desirable, nor even necessarily possible, for entities in areas with more demanding privacy law to use US-based hosting or storage service.

      Second, by the standards of places developed beyond the barter economy, Australia's overseas links are long, not terribly fast, and rather expensive(Also, Telstra...)

    3. Re:LOLWUT??? by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 2

      You read my post back-asswards. I'll rephrase for you.

      Why is it a problem that Australians want to keep their data in Australia?

    4. Re:LOLWUT??? by synapse7 · · Score: 1

      Besides the issue with hosting across the planet, how often are the MS and Amazon clouds down?

    5. Re:LOLWUT??? by isopropanol · · Score: 2

      Canada's privacy commissioner also had similar comments a while back.

      Also, if you're doing your tax return (any country) at a income tax preparer chain (ie H&R Block) read the contract carefully...

    6. Re:LOLWUT??? by shugah · · Score: 2

      I worked on a large electronic health project in BC and the BC privacy even commissioner had misgivings about having patient date stored in Alberta, but with the Patriot Act allowing the US to breach NDAs and Confidentiality agreements without even notice, storing patient data in the US was a non-starter.

      --
      If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to be made prolonging the problem
    7. Re:LOLWUT??? by shugah · · Score: 1

      I meant BC Privacy Commissioner even had ...

      --
      If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to be made prolonging the problem
    8. Re:LOLWUT??? by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So build some capacity out there. There is a market so take advantage of it.

    9. Re:LOLWUT??? by ian_mackereth · · Score: 4, Informative

      Funny how Americans think that since breaking Enigma helped them win the WW2 so much, they are entitled to have the same advantage over the wole world now.

      Umm... that movie where US troops secured the vital Enigma machine wasn't actually accurate. It was the Brits who stole the intact Enigma and the brightest of the Brits who cracked the code and, to a large extent, helped them win the war. (OK, having a whole lot of US planes and bombs and ships and tanks and stuff to DO something with the intercepted data was also quite significant, but the intelligence side of things was all down to the Poms.)

    10. Re:LOLWUT??? by buglista · · Score: 2

      And to be fair, the Poles broke the 3 rotor version, before anyone else even bothered trying.

    11. Re:LOLWUT??? by Theophany · · Score: 1

      You sir, have restored my faith in Slashdot. At least temporarily.

    12. Re:LOLWUT??? by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

      Anyone who takes their historical knowledge from Hollywood movies probably also has problems with the polysyllabic words in your correction anyway. I wonder if he thinks Hitler was killed in a burning movie theatre by a group of American commandos.

    13. Re:LOLWUT??? by houghi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sure, it helped having the US on our side, but so did it help having the French, The Dutch, the Canadians, the Polish, the Russians, Australians, Indians, the many, many, many others on our side.

      It is called an alliance for a reason. They were allies. They worked together.

      They did not do it alone. None did it alone. It is a pity that that is forgotten so often.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    14. Re:LOLWUT??? by tqk · · Score: 3, Informative

      It was the Brits who stole the intact Enigma and the brightest of the Brits who cracked the code and, to a large extent, helped them win the war.

      Not according to Vasili Mitrokhin. He reported that the Poles had cracked Enigma and handed it all over to the Brits and the French five weeks before WWII broke out, yet another reason why the Poles were rightfully incensed at what happened to Poland at the end of WWII.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    15. Re:LOLWUT??? by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      Wait, what?! Next time you'll tell me Oppenheimer didn't invent the atomic bomb!

    16. Re:LOLWUT??? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It isn't that Australians want to keep their data in Australia so much as they're being told that remote storage--especially in the US--is risky. And they're right. The US just doesn't want people to know this and the last thing they want is people from Australia's Ministry of Defense running around and telling people this.

    17. Re:LOLWUT??? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Don't forget Poland.

      (I know it's an old bit, but I still enjoy it.)

    18. Re:LOLWUT??? by green1 · · Score: 1

      I'm curious to know what issue they had with Alberta hosting? (speaking as an Albertan) My understanding is that the laws are virtually identical on this stuff between the 2 provinces?

    19. Re:LOLWUT??? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Because then the US government and their big-business buddies can't see it.

    20. Re:LOLWUT??? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      If you're thinking of U-571, that was actually a really good and well-done movie. Unfortunately, it also had very little to do with historical reality, like most movies that are based on history.

    21. Re:LOLWUT??? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      It isn't that Australians want to keep their data in Australia so much as they're being told that remote storage--especially in the US--is risky. And they're right. The US just doesn't want people to know this and the last thing they want is people from Australia's Ministry of Defense running around and telling people this.

      I wish I could credit Australian CEO's and Australian government organisations with that much intellect and common sense but the sad fact is that the 75 ms lag between the US and Australia would cause just about everything to slow down. "Cloud" services in the US are too slow to be usable in Australia. 75ms is the theoretical time to cross from Sydney to LA, lag in reality is much greater. Want to play a game on US servers, 250 ms pings at best. Sucks when there are no Australian servers.

      So it's more about "lost productivity" then security.

      BTW, the Ministry of Defence is not worried, we all know that the CIA gets it's info from CNN.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    22. Re:LOLWUT??? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Funny how Americans think that since breaking Enigma helped them win the WW2 so much, they are entitled to have the same advantage over the wole world now.

      Umm... that movie where US troops secured the vital Enigma machine wasn't actually accurate. It was the Brits who stole the intact Enigma and the brightest of the Brits who cracked the code and, to a large extent, helped them win the war. (OK, having a whole lot of US planes and bombs and ships and tanks and stuff to DO something with the intercepted data was also quite significant, but the intelligence side of things was all down to the Poms.)

      Yes,

      The Polish had broken the code used in 1928, but by 1938 the Nazi's added 2 extra wheels.

      The first enigma machines and code books were captured by a British commando raid in march 4 1941 but these were the codes for German home waters only.

      On 9 May, an enigma machine and more importantly the military code books were captured when a British Destroyer HMS Bulldog depth charged U-110 and forced it to surface. The radio operator did not destroy the code books. These code books provided the big breakthrough in breaking enigma.

      Even JN-25, where most of the US cryptanalytic talent was focused received significant help from Australian, Dutch and British cryptanalysts (Hut 7 at Bletchly Park was dedicated to Japanese Naval codes).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    23. Re:LOLWUT??? by crutchy · · Score: 1

      blame telstra for not hiring enough kangaroo-fucking employees to keep their customers drooling

  5. Toys - Pram by flurdy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is that really them throwing their toys out of the pram?!

    "How dare the Aussies deny us from intercepting data and shutting down sites by Australian companies and citizens"

    --
    My other Sig is very funny.
  6. I'm an asshole too by erroneus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whoever is in charge of Australia's defence department is an asshole and I happen to agree with him. WHY is it even close to being a good idea to send data out like that and especially in the US? Sorry, but I don't trust the US government.

    1. Re:I'm an asshole too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't trust the US government, my government, or any government for that matter.

    2. Re:I'm an asshole too by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 1

      I DO thrust the US government to invade my privacy. The US can only blame the Australians for having learned how the US behaves.

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
    3. Re:I'm an asshole too by VolciMaster · · Score: 1

      I try to never "thrust the US government" anywhere, myself - they tend to 'thrust' back

  7. Two faced by hawkbat05 · · Score: 2

    I wish I was surprised that the US has the nerve to be angry after the megaupload arrests. I don't engage in any of this but even I'm worried about having a VPS hosted on US soil.

  8. You're kidding, right? by msobkow · · Score: 4, Funny

    Australia and New Zealand are notorious for having "pipe problems" due to the long-haul links they have to use, and the US expects them to have all their critical business data travelling those overloaded pipes for the convenience of US agencies and companies??!?!!?!

    So the convenience of American firms is now justification for slagging the sound and reasonable business practices of foreign nations?

    Navel gazing US again. If they navel gaze any closer they're going to find themselves eyeballing their own stomachs from the inside... :P

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:You're kidding, right? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's not just live data located in the US. It's data in Australia managed by a US company that could be subject to a US warrant, or even backups of Aus servers hosted in the US.

    2. Re:You're kidding, right? by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 2

      I think the article has more to do with AU preventing the US companies and firms from operating assets (cloud, server farms, hosting, etc) in AU, and providing services to the AU gov, rather then hauling all that traffic back to US soil, and using US firm resources here.

      That said, I do see major issues with companies storing data on US assets (whether abroad or not). Especially when we read articles about whole sale data monitoring by US gov entities (FBI, NSA, CIA, take your pick), whether legal or not, it is happening.

      I could be wrong.. but I suspect I am not.

      --
      I came, I conquered, I coredumped
  9. Good for Australia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I live in the US. With the recent mega upload fiasco and some of the other craziness, I think it's a smart move for foreigners to avoid hosting in the US.

    US courts are trying to reach into other countries now. We've got way to much craziness here to trust us. The government should have known their actions will have consequences.

    1. Re:Good for Australia by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I live in the US. With the recent mega upload fiasco and some of the other craziness, I think it's a smart move for foreigners to avoid hosting in the US.

      US courts are trying to reach into other countries now. We've got way to much craziness here to trust us. The government should have known their actions will have consequences.

      That isn't necessarily true, it really depends on what you are planning on doing. 'Jurisdiction shopping' for hosting purposes isn't all that different, strategically, from doing it for tax laws. Different jurisdictions are useful for different things and varying degrees of terrible for others.

      If you, say, actually want to comply with EU and/or member state privacy law, or just don't want the NSA doing cloud backups for you, you'd be a moron to let your data get anywhere near the US. Same deal if you want to do something that makes the MPAA sad. On the other hand, the US is a pretty decent(and attractively priced) place to have strong opinions about assorted governments, religions, and ethnic groups that would quite possibly earn you an extended stay in a cozy correctional facility at home... The important thing is identifying your requirements and doing your best to ensure that the most sympathetic jurisdictions, for those needs, are where your activities occur...

    2. Re:Good for Australia by donscarletti · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I live in China. I'd only consider a completely local hosting solution, not because the US government fucks you harder than the Chinese government, but simply because you're going to get fucked by the local one whatever you do, so better leave it at one than be double penetrated.

      --
      When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
    3. Re:Good for Australia by green1 · · Score: 1

      What many people forget though is that they are always subject to the laws of their own place of residence, in addition to the laws of the location where their servers reside, the location where their DNS is hosted, and the location where their TLD is hosted. Regardless of what you plan to do, you're often best to limit all those things to as few jurisdictions as possible just to try to keep the rules straight, let alone wanting to be at the whims of any ridiculous law passed in any of those jurisdictions.

      Hosting your blog against some specific government/religion/ethnic group in a place with actual free speech doesn't help if you yourself still live in a place without free speech.

    4. Re:Good for Australia by green1 · · Score: 1

      And that's what so many people forget. Getting your data to a safe spot doesn't help unless you yourself are in a safe spot too.

  10. a "sanity check" for everybody by RobertLTux · · Score: 2

    The biggest and simplest question when deploying a "Cloud Solution" is very simple

    WHAT HAPPENS IF IT RAINS??

    In this case it makes sense for a company based in %Nation% to have the primary servers in %Nation% or if thats not possible in %AlliedNearbyNation%.

    heck if a US (based) company wants to do "Cloud" things in and for say Australia then it stands to reason that a nonzero number of DCs should actually BE IN AUSTRALIA. (don't they have a bit of a bandwidth problem??)

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    1. Re:a "sanity check" for everybody by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 3, Funny

      WHAT HAPPENS IF IT RAINS??

      Grab your gun and bring the cat in.

    2. Re:a "sanity check" for everybody by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer I currently work for Fujitsu (Australia). They have been investing heavily in DC's here in Oz for a while now. Anyone know if Aussie IBM'ers still have to connect to a mainframe in the US to fill out their time sheets?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  11. No America - you're not getting our data. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    One of the reasons we don't like hosting stuff on American servers is due to one of their laws that the FBI (and similar agencies) can obtain data with a warrant that tells the service (cloud) provider not to tell the customer us. We have our own private cloud infrastructure here in Perth and spread to Adelaide and Sydney with talks of having some in Singapore. We do not want our data on cloud infrastructure we don't manage in another country.

    1. Re:No America - you're not getting our data. by blueg3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is really true of any pair of countries. The only reason to host data and servers in the US is if it's (much) cheaper or if that data needs to be highly available to your customers in the US. Otherwise, the legal and practical implications of storing your data in a country other than your own make such a decision crazy for businesses.

    2. Re:No America - you're not getting our data. by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 1

      If the US wants to be competitive then lobby congress to loose this law, not like tech companies don't have the money and look at what Oil has been able to lobby for in the past.

      --
      "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
  12. Correct response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just raise an eyebrow, look the trade representative in the eye for a long, quiet moment, and then get back to work.

    1. Re:Correct response by jonwil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, the correct response is for the Australian Government to stop acting like the 51st state and to start saying NO to America on things that dont directly benefit Australia.

      It does NOT benefit Australia to store data belonging to Australian Governments (Federal, State and Local) or Australian Government departments on overseas hosts (both because of the risks of what foreign governments can do with that data if its on their soil AND because of the high costs for bandwidth between Australia and the rest of the world)

      It does NOT benefit Australia to be so closely tied to the USA militarily (US troops in Darwin, spending big $$$ on US military hardware like the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter etc) and in fact we should be making closer military ties with countries to our north like Indonesia.

      It does NOT benefit Australia to sign "free trade" agreements that require Australia to open its trade even further whilst allowing the USA to remain essentially closed to Australian agricultural exports through US tariff and subsidy programs.

      It does NOT benefit Australia to give in to the demands of the big content producing companies when they ask for stronger protection for their content (weakening of ISP safe harbor, forced disconnection of ISP customers alleged to be pirates, ability to obtain ISP user details without presenting sufficient evidence that the user they want information on was in fact violating their copyright etc)

      It does NOT benefit Australia to make it easier for law enforcement and intelligence agencies (Australian, US or otherwise) to spy on random people (Australian, US or otherwise) where there is no specific evidence to back up their claims that spying or wiretapping that person will allow the agency in question to catch or identify the bad guys.

      Oh and it does NOT benefit Australia to send troops to far flung countries when there is not a threat to Australia or to the world at large. Afghanistan was a justified war initially but now its gone on for too long and we should let the democratically elected government of Afghanistan handle their own security. Iraq 1 was a justified war because Iraq did invade another country and at the time they did have powerful weapons that were a threat to other countries (SCUD missiles, chemical weapons etc) Iraq 2 was NOT a justified war as there was not enough evidence that Iraq at the time presented a threat to its neighbors or to the world at large.

  13. Predator Drone Strikes by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 4, Funny

    on suspected members of Men-At-Work will soon follow.

  14. Cloud Perception by rogueippacket · · Score: 5, Informative

    As someone who regularly solutions cloud services for customers, I can assure you, the exact location of the cloud is very important to our big customers. Being able to say it's based out of entirely Canadian datacenters on an entirely Canadian network is a huge advantage over our competitors south of the border. It's not like any of them have been bitten yet, but the perception is that their data is much less safe in another country.

    1. Re:Cloud Perception by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, God, you did not just use "solution" as a verb, did you? Really?

    2. Re:Cloud Perception by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As someone who regularly solutions cloud services for customers, I can assure you, the exact location of the cloud is very important to our big customers. Being able to say it's based out of entirely Canadian datacenters on an entirely Canadian network is a huge advantage over our competitors south of the border. It's not like any of them have been bitten yet, but the perception is that their data is much less safe in another country.

      Not just perception.

      I work for an international company, and we frequently have problems pushing legal cases where the server / data and victims are in different countries. So it's not just a question of risking foreign laws or foreign governments accessing the data. We have had a dutch guy attacking our services for a year now, and even stole personal info on thousands of dutch people. We have exact logs on everything, detailed proof of him trying to sell the information onwards, a recorded confession from somebody helping him (and promise to assist the police)... But the dutch police refuse to do anything as the one service is on a server in another European country, and the stolen data on a server in the US. They are not interested that it's a dutch company, dutch attacker and dutch victims. They did't even care that he has phished hundreds of dutch people...

    3. Re:Cloud Perception by RodBee · · Score: 1

      Oh, God, you did not just use "solution" as a verb, did you? Really?

      Yeah, I, too, felt the grim whispers of PR hell from here.

    4. Re:Cloud Perception by Nidi62 · · Score: 2

      I legitimately thought he had left out a few words or something. It was not until I reread it that I saw it was intended as a verb. It made me cringe

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    5. Re:Cloud Perception by evil_aaronm · · Score: 1

      I feel a strange sense of rage, just reading "who regularly solutions". No. Just don't. Bad rogue!

    6. Re:Cloud Perception by assertation · · Score: 1

      Yah, those slicky boy marketing types love to do that. Makes them sound more impressive.

    7. Re:Cloud Perception by burisch_research · · Score: 1

      So, Sealand then? :P

      --
      char*f="char*f=%c%s%c;main(){printf(f,34,f,34);}";main(){printf(f,34,f,34);}
    8. Re:Cloud Perception by twmcneil · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I think he did. Else it was some real bad typing but I'm deaf so it didn't bother me.

      --
      "The ferrets, they're every where I tell you!"
    9. Re:Cloud Perception by green1 · · Score: 1

      Considering that it is likely illegal for a Canadian company to store any confidential client details in an American data centre (due to PATRIOT and other laws that specifically contravene Canadian privacy laws) it's not just a "huge advantage" it's essential.

    10. Re:Cloud Perception by rogueippacket · · Score: 1

      Haha, "solutions", "sells", "architects", "flogs customers over the head with" - such is the curse of a sales engineer, we have to adopt the slang of the C-suite! Nothing gets sold otherwise.

    11. Re:Cloud Perception by rogueippacket · · Score: 1

      Oddly enough, it's only illegal for certain parts of the government to do that. Most larger companies have restrictions (usually self-imposed) on where the data can live, but you really need to read the fine print on those storage agreements... very rarely do they say anything about shared media, shared networks, third-party vendors being given access, etc.
      My favourite example is hosted Exchanged from Microsoft. They charge half of what we do for what is, technically, the same service - but the vast majority of small and medium size businesses simply do not care about the future of their data, only the price tag today.

  15. Victorian Privacy Commissioner by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is that the person responsible for safeguarding Victoria's secret?

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Victorian Privacy Commissioner by captain_sweatpants · · Score: 1

      indubitably my good man.

  16. Dear United States trade representative by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 5, Informative

    Fuck You.

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:Dear United States trade representative by evil_aaronm · · Score: 2

      I'm an American and I approve this message.

  17. whoa by nomadic · · Score: 3, Informative

    The U.S. trade representative, whose sole job is to promote U.S. companies overseas, is complaining because the Australian government is telling Australian companies not to use American companies for a certain service? In other word, a guy whose job it is to complain about trade barriers is complaining about trade barriers? HOW DARE HE?

    1. Re:whoa by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      Yes, the US trade representative is merely doing his job. Hopefully that cuts both ways - that he is informing his superiors about the guffaws that his statements are triggering.

      Ultimately it might trigger some reciprocity or treaty generation that would make it less important what country was hosting the data.

    2. Re:whoa by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

      That's what I'm seeing, too, pretty much. Australian government says that American servers are insecure, American government takes offense at that, Slashdot fans the flames of government conspiracy theories...

      Just a typical Friday morning.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  18. Shove off US by JustAnotherIdiot · · Score: 2

    Just because the US blindly trusts China and India with their data, doesn't mean the rest of the world wants to trust anyone but their own country.

    --
    What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
  19. wtf? by pak9rabid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a US citizen, I can't help but think WTF. Let them (and the rest of the world, for that matter) do whatever the fuck they want.

    1. Re:wtf? by evil_aaronm · · Score: 1

      Why do you hate America? You're not considering our economy, our jobs, or security, our future, our domination over the rest of the world. Again, why do you hate America? /snark

    2. Re:wtf? by pak9rabid · · Score: 1

      You spelled 'Merica wrong.

  20. Right on by no-body · · Score: 1

    don't want your cloud data backed up in Utah!

  21. What? by Antarell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did the clown sprouting this crap listen to himself? God forbid a country that isn't the USA look after it's own industries and interests! To be honest I and many Aussies can't trust the Yanks as far as we could throw them, let alone let them store our data. Typical self centred 2 year old tantrum by some Yank dickwad who thinks the world should revolve around the USA. Yet another reason to build a 100ft wall around the USA until their idiot government/corporations (same thing?) learn to play with the grown ups.

  22. We are no lapdogs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I perceive that housing data in the US not just a security risk but also a not sound investment.

    We (Australians) prefer knowing whom we are storing data with and knowing that it doesn't leave the country.

    If we did store the data offsite and an International link goes down then we would be hamstrung until that link is fixed or re-routed.

  23. Why is this news? by MikeRT · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The point of a trade representative to another country is to shill, without principle, for the interests of their country's economy. If the US Trade Representative gets too pushy, just remind him that if the US ever has any intention of "containing China," Australia is one of those "do not piss off, under any circumstances" regional bases. It's especially important to have on our good side in the event China ever goes batshit crazy by seizing Taiwan, then says "since we've already risked WWIII, let's just go ahead and invade South Korea and Japan as well since their armies aren't worth shit."

    1. Re:Why is this news? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      It's sort of a combination of being a diplomat and being a Chamber of Commerce hack, with the blatant national interest of the former, the shameless special-interest grubbing of the latter, and the professional obligation to dishonesty of both.

      I'd be quite surprised if the chap hired to do the job is dumb enough not to know exactly why the product isn't selling; but that isn't going to keep him from trying to sell it as convincingly as possible....

    2. Re:Why is this news? by msobkow · · Score: 2

      It's a good trade representative's job to find mutually beneficial business opportunities in hopes of expanding the markets.

      It is not their job to slag anyone who doesn't want to use their nation's services.

      In fact, it's really, really bad business to bad-mouth your prospective customers that way, regardless of whether you work for government or industry.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    3. Re:Why is this news? by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      It's especially important to have on our good side in the event China ever goes batshit crazy by seizing Taiwan, then says "since we've already risked WWIII, let's just go ahead and invade South Korea and Japan as well since their armies aren't worth shit."

      Offtopic, but if China ever does attack, invade, and take Taiwan, World War III would have already started, because to take Taiwan China would necessarily have to neutralize US ships either docked in Taiwan (which is pretty much constantly, they are planned as part of Taiwan/s missile/air defense system) or at sea nearby. And it is likely that any attack by China on Taiwan would coincide with an attack by North Korea into South Korea (at China's urging of course) in order to prevent US forces (as well as possibly some SK forces) in SK from participating against China, and to force the US to fight on 2 fronts. Of course Australia and Japan play a part in deterring an attack as well, as both contain US bases and Australia would join in in offensive operations. Japan is of course bound by law to be defensive only. Fortunately I think China is smart enough not to try something like this. If they want Taiwan back, they have to make it economically beneficial for them part of China and come back willingly. Which, if things keep going the way they are now, might just happen.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    4. Re:Why is this news? by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      True, but then again we've been planning for that for years. We have Guam as a stepping stone/stopping point to make the hops easier, a large amount of equipment, fuel, and supplies stored at Diego Garcia, and of course Large bases in Japan, South Korea, and Australia. And while the supply line is long, it is also very safe from Chinese attack. It wouldn't be a fun war, and a lot of people would die, but the US and allies would probably win. But if Russia stepped in alongside China, thinks would get really bad in a hurry.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    5. Re:Why is this news? by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      The point of a trade representative to another country is to shill, without principle,

      Bullshit. This is the first nation founded on a good idea. Having principles is supposed to be the core of our identity. Sacrificing our principles may provide short-term windfalls on occasion, but in the long run it has never been anything but a path to destruction, and should never be a stated objective.

      We became the world's superpower in large part because We The People believed. Take away that belief, and we are nothing.

    6. Re:Why is this news? by Antarell · · Score: 1

      ...or maybe Australia can actually spend money on dealing with the China problem instead of having the US solve the world's problems.

      I don't think Australia actually has that big of a problem with China (apart from letting them supply NBN hardware :-)).

      The US is very far from perfect but at the same time the rest of the world needs to step up and stop expecting the US to police the world-- clearly we are bad at it.

      When was the US asked to police the world for us? They seem to have to have taken on the "bend down to us or bend over to us, you choose" approach somewhere in recent history and not been told where to go due to some misplaced feeling of obligation or straight out fear.

  24. Ob by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Would you store your beer collection in a country where it's legal to piss in it?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:Ob by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We at Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. refer to exactly this policy as "getting free inventory".

    2. Re:Ob by mjwx · · Score: 1

      We at Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. refer to exactly this policy as "getting free inventory".

      Non American customers of Anheuser-Busch refer to this product as Budweiser.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  25. "their data being scrutinized by foreign governme" by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and the worst, most intrusive government award goes to....

    --
    I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  26. Lost in Google Translator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I don't get it, did this get mixed up when this was translated from the original Australian?

  27. Basic national security tip : by Vlaix · · Score: 1

    Keep your data, and everything actually sensitive domestic and well under control. The US doesn't own the security of individuals and nations over the world, and as I see it (I'm not US based nor an American citizen) it can't really afford it anymore, only claim it. The US barks, but I doubt it will bite. And there's a more practical issue : Australia is not easily connected to the rest of the world and the Australian network is already full of friction as it is.

  28. Free Trade is Great by cfulton · · Score: 2

    As long as America makes the rules. What do you think the US government would do if we started storing all of our data on Australian servers? We would tell Americans that it is safer and more productive to keep that data here. This country is so full of itself; It is amazing.

    --
    No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    1. Re:Free Trade is Great by evil_aaronm · · Score: 1

      Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

  29. Really by RetiredMidn · · Score: 2

    Next thing you know, they'll want to drink their own beer, too.

    1. Re:Really by no0b · · Score: 1

      Australians have they're own beer?

    2. Re:Really by rHBa · · Score: 1

      As a European, I'll happily sit back and let the US and OZ drink each others 'beer'.

    3. Re:Really by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      I don't know. But do Americans have their own beer? Don't they all drink Budwiser?

    4. Re:Really by bdabautcb · · Score: 1

      We are not all Budweiser schills. http://mnbeer.com/.

      --
      Koalas. They're telepathic. Plus, they control the weather. -Margaret
  30. Oh come on, now by F69631 · · Score: 2

    First of all, he is supposed to point out *real* trade barriers. When Australian government provides information about the numerous problems of using USA based cloud services from Australia (connection problems, lag, ability of USA government to snoop on it, etc.), he's not obligated to complain...

    That said, if it was coming from any other country, I could go "Just some government official overstepping a bit. It happens. Nobody will listen. Why is this newsworthy?" but USA has *very* strong track-record about massive behind-the-scenes lobbying in issues similar to this one (see: USA influence on other countries' copyright legislation, etc.) and whenever something actually gets out, it's probably just the tip of the iceberg.

    1. Re:Oh come on, now by mdielmann · · Score: 2

      That is a real trade barrier. Just like the Spanish Inquisition was a real trade barrier to medieval witches, and the morality laws in Dubai are a trade barrier to orgy tours that aren't hosted by local sheiks. Now, the reasonable response would be for the US to not try to enforce their laws around the world, but that isn't likely to happen. So one would hope that this perfectly reasonable trade barrier will remain in place.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
  31. Duh by Galestar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work for an American cloud service provider, and even we do not want to store our(customers') data in the U.S. The patriot act is a huge obstacle when selling to foreign customers. Hence why we have a major data center in Canada, and are looking at putting one in the U.K.

    (see http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/12/patriot-act-and-privacy-laws-take-a-bite-out-of-us-cloud-business.ars)

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      dont put it in the UK, theyll give you anything that the USA orders them to hand over. If you want data to be just a little more secure, stuff it in a DC in Holland or Germany but not the UK. How can I tell you this? Because I work with government IT in the UK and know that they will give the US anything they want.

    2. Re:Duh by quacking+duck · · Score: 2

      Do any of your IT people in the US have sysadmin access to the Canadian data center? Are any Canadian operators directly answerable to your company's US management or executive staff?

      If so, I'm not sure simply physically having DCs in Canada or the UK is sufficient protection against attacks by the US government.

      We've already seem the US wildly overstepping its bounds by "[shutting] down online-gambling site Bodog.com, and indicted its three top execs, despite their non-U.S. citizenships, residence outside the U.S. and the fact that the company is based in Vancouver, has no physical presence in the U.S. and its gambling business is legal in the country in which the company operates". Their justification was that it had a .com registration, and they claim all sites using .com and .org are subject to US jurisdiction.

    3. Re:Duh by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      You will still be an US based company that must follow US laws. No matter if you put local servers in the other side of the world, if the US government tells you that you must give them all your clients data, no matter where are the servers that have them, you must comply.

      And remember, you are not just dealing with abstract institutions, you are dealing with people at all levels of it too, that could get some benefit getting a secret. Who watches the watchers?

    4. Re:Duh by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      I work for an American cloud service provider, and even we do not want to store our(customers') data in the U.S. The patriot act is a huge obstacle when selling to foreign customers. Hence why we have a major data center in Canada, and are looking at putting one in the U.K.

      Unless it's an arms length, wholly owned subsidiary in which the employees are all legally entitled to tell anybody with a Patriot Act request to piss off, you haven't done anything. Because an American owned company is still American controlled and subject to US laws.

      So, unless you can demonstrate a lot more legal safeguards, you still might have troubles. Because if Americans can still access the data center, it's no different than if it was actually in the US in terms of the Patriot Act.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  32. Sorry by Scarred+Intellect · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Dear Australia,

    I, an American Citizen and veteran of the Marine Corps where I served an an infantry machine gunner, and filling billets including intelligence analyst and company clerk, sincerely apologize for this.

    Although this isn't my fault (for I was not allowed to vote while I was in the service. This is my opinion, I found it too much of a coincidence that my ballot and that of a friend from the same state arrived exactly 1 month to the day after it was supposed to be postmarked for return. Twice.), you can bet I will vote this round, and will not be voting for anyone that is currently in office, for they all allow these things to happen, which is an embarrassment to us all.

    I'm E-mailing my senators and congressman now. I have other concerns to raise with them anyway, like why my state charges sales tax on private sales of vehicles (double taxation) and why they want to charge tax on the Real Market Value of said vehicle even though it was sold for 1/3 that price (taxing money not spent).

    Sincerely,
    Troubled American Citizen

    P.S. Are you guys still open for citizenship? At times it's more prudent to abandon a sinking vessel rather than continue trying to fix what is so severely broken.

    1. Re:Sorry by YankDownUnder · · Score: 2

      I live here as a permanent resident - I had foresight 12 years ago...c'mon over, mate! Just remember to tell folks here yer from Canada - makes for an easier transition...

      --
      YankDownUnder Veni, Vidi, volo in domum redire
    2. Re:Sorry by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Dear American Citizen,
      We get the worst of US ideas imposed over here without the best so you'd get nothing but a bit of time lag before the bullshit hits here. We even copied the Californian electricity trading system and have a lot of petty little Enron clones sucking us dry with the full support of governments, that's how stupid we are and how committed we are to copying things from the USA whether it makes sense or not. Stay at home. You'll be better off there and will probably throw your TSA out at about the time a clone of it starts groping our balls over here.

  33. Standing up for their privacy rights by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    Maybe someone needs a dose of laser guided democracy!

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  34. I think ... by davetv · · Score: 1

    The USA media demigods prolly claiming all rights to Waltzing Matilda and Advance Australia Fair

  35. Baboons by kschendel · · Score: 1

    "The irony-meter is off the charts..."

    Particularly since this article is immediately followed on the page with "Baboons learn to identify words". It seems that at least some baboons haven't learned to associate sense with those words.

  36. True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Trust no one. Encrypt everything.

    1. Re:True by pla · · Score: 2

      Trust no one. Encrypt everything.

      Fact: The NSA has shown itself, historically, to have knowledge and technology 20-30 years ahead of that available to the rest of the human race (case in point, their suggestion to modify DES' S-boxes to strengthen it against differential cryptanalysis, an attack using math no one had even heard of until almost 30 years later).

      Fact: A general purpose quantum computer makes all commonly used encryption algorithms worthless (though a number of quantum-resistant algorithms have started to appear, such as http://tbuktu.github.com/ntru/).

      Fact: Countless research programs have demonstrated the viability of quantum computing, and you can even buy a 128 bit quantum computer today.

      Likely: The NSA already has the quantum equivalent of a Beowulf cluster of these, if not something much, much better.

      Conclusion: Using encryption trusts the single least-trustable entity on the planet not to already have the ability to turn it into Swiss cheese. That said, the NSA doesn't give two damns about the "little" things like copyright infringement, kiddy porn, or terrorist plots, so most of us have no reason to care about this. The local doughnut-eaters still have no ability to read your encrypted emails.

  37. Wow, just wow. by hipp5 · · Score: 2

    Because of the US Patriot Act the province in which I live has made it illegal for me, a government employee, to store personal information (including email addresses, age, views about things, etc.) about citizens on US servers. If I do I could be fined $2,000 and my municipal office could be fined $500,000. Sooo Mr. US, repeal your Patriot Act and then come back to us about using your servers.

    1. Re:Wow, just wow. by davetv · · Score: 1

      No Australian organisation with a CIO worth a crust would set up with hosting offshore. We have world class local hosting.

    2. Re:Wow, just wow. by Nivag064 · · Score: 1

      Simply!

      US publicly repeals Patriot Act, and signs in a secret law!

      The the US already has secret laws - besides which, would you really trust the US not to peek at your data even if they said they wouldn't???

      I remember an American president saying they had "No intention of bombing Hanoi!", shortly before they did so! In fact, Hanoi became the most heavily defended city to ever experience an air attack. The Vietnamese managed to shoot down B-52 bombers - not every bombing raid, but enough to worry the US.

  38. And the truth shall set you free by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Is the US upset that the Aussies are storing data on-shore or that the government there is telling the truth of the perils of storing off-shore?

  39. Why would anyone in their right mind.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ..want to store their data in the US?

    With their history of Illegal Wiretapping, Ignoring treaties they've ratified, Ignoring international law, performing industrial espionage and doing just about whatever the hell they want without regards to economic impact or deaths inflicted - it's just plain stupid.

    The simple fact of the matter is that you cannot trust the US Government to be honest.

  40. UK/Europe by martin · · Score: 1

    has the same issues, even "Safe harbour" isn't useful to us as NSL dolled out under Patriot Act etc make a nonsense of this.
    We'll keeps our own data thanks until you get some decent data protection legislation thats worth anything

  41. Duh. by benro03 · · Score: 1

    (The first think I thought when I read it, especially when I read what the Aussie DoD said.)

    --
    I am Homer of Borg, resistance is - Ooo Donuts!
  42. When the USA starts respecting human rights ... by hherb · · Score: 1

    If and when the USA start respecting human rights and demonstrably enforce an even marginal privacy legislation where corporates cannot simply muscle their way into any private nook and cranny they take an interest in, I guess business entities in other countries would start seeing the USA as a viable competitor in the data storage business. Until then I guess they only rank marginally higher than North Korea for such purposes ...

  43. Trust Me While I Stick This Knife In Your Back by andersh · · Score: 1

    Oh, yes, like the treaties between the US and EU with regards to privacy and security.

    The US government and its intelligence agencies say that the treaty does not matter, if it's owned by an American company [incorporated in Europe]it will still be subject to US laws and demands... That kind of treaty? Two-faced deception?

    If a branch is incorporated in Europe it's a local, legal entity, it is only subject to European laws, regardless of foreign ownership. In fact the treaty should "cover" it from any American laws, but alas that's not the case.

    You cannot trust branches of American corporations abroad to respect local laws due to the legal pressure they face at home. I don't blame them, they have no choice but to obey.

  44. The other way round by pswPhD · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder if the US department of defense would allow its contractors to ever host their data in Australia?

  45. Me too by hawguy · · Score: 1

    As an American Citizen, I also store my data overseas - I have nothing to hide, but I like to think that it makes it less likely that my data will be swept up in a Megaupload type seizure.

  46. Re:The latency kills you - Mod anon up by aristotle-dude · · Score: 3, Informative

    Even if the USA had sane laws & law enforcement, the fact that your data is sitting on the other side of the planet adds a lot of latency.

    The speed of light is the limiting factor, and we haven't figured out how to beat that one yet.

    Further, the high cost of fat pipes in Australia strongly discourages cloud providers.

    I cannot get into specifics to protect my identity but this is why you want to have at least a cache of your data in australia if you are a multi-national. It makes no sense whatsoever for Australian entities to store their data in the US.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
  47. News at 11 by hexagonc · · Score: 2

    "Alligators complain that birds will not nest in their jaws. Cites discriminatory nesting practices." Damn near makes me ashamed to be American that officials AND COMPANIES here are that stupid and absolutely clueless. The irony of this almost requires no further comment.

    1. Re:News at 11 by Skapare · · Score: 1

      There's nothing to be ashamed of for being smarter and more insightful than corporate executives and government officials.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  48. Best reasoning by FaytLeingod · · Score: 2

    I work for a financial institution and the main reason for the paranoia around storing data in the cloud is that no cloud company would allow one of the companies internal experts to inspect their environments to the level that is required by governance.

    --
    as it is eaten so it shall pass
  49. Walls Rise And Fall by andersh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That wall will be built by the Americans themselves if it ever comes about. It is not so likely now that either Obama or Romney will end up as President.

    However the United States has always had periods of voluntary and ideologically founded Isolationism. If you give them another shock to the system like 9/11 or internal forces such as the Tea Party pushes them in that direction they could very well decide to shut their doors to the greater world.

    I don't think the world will be better off without the US, we might not like everythng the US does, but it has probably been more beneficial than bad. I'm not disregarding the wars, mistakes and indirect suffering, but whatever power leads the world in the future will have to make the same tough decisions. You can't have stability without the threat/use of force.

    1. Re:Walls Rise And Fall by Uniquitous · · Score: 1

      That's a fair-minded view. Still, it wouldn't hurt one bit if the rest of the world told us to fuck off every now and then.

  50. Re:Complete hypocrisy. by Tridus · · Score: 1

    Hypocrisy in trade is pretty much US government policy.

    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
  51. Unsung heroes by Kupfernigk · · Score: 2

    The capture by the Royal Navy of not one but two Enigmas at sea in the course of the war was very important to the Battle of the Atlantic, and hence to the survival of the UK, but it surely had little effect on the outcome for the USA. I suggest that radar and rdf were actually as, if not more important, and that in those cases honours are even - the magnetron in the UK, and the work of the Rad Lab at MIT. In fact, in a bad attack of historical revisionism, the work of the Rad Lab may well have been far more important than the Manhattan Project. With complete air and sea superiority, an invasion of Japan was never necessary - the entire country could have been contained until it had no fighting assets left. The Bomb was just cheaper. But without radar, control of the Pacific and the Atlantic would have taken much, much longer.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  52. physics trumps politics by Bobtree · · Score: 2

    Locality rules the universe. Networked storage and communications are subject to the same laws of physics as everything else.

  53. Re:What goes around comes around I guess... by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

    Say should we expect some invasion in the forthcoming months ? ^_^

    Only if the sanctions don't work

  54. A simple one word answer. by Skapare · · Score: 1

    Yes.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  55. Plenty of Feedback by andersh · · Score: 1

    Thank you, I think it's fair to say the US receives plenty of feedback and most of it's negative. That's just the way humans work. We hardly praise people when things are just fine? :)

    1. Re:Plenty of Feedback by Uniquitous · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, we get plenty of criticism, but it's very rare that we don't end up getting our way. That's my point.

  56. The problem is the Patriot Act by presidenteloco · · Score: 4, Informative

    In Canada, it is illegal for public agencies or IT companies serving them to store customer/member data on US-operated servers because the Patriot Act contravenes Canadian privacy laws. Many other Canadian associations and businesses have similar policies, because Patriot Act searches would violate their infomration privacy policy.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    1. Re:The problem is the Patriot Act by wiedzmin · · Score: 2

      Yeap, our Canadian location can't access some of the SaaS systems used by US employees. It's a pain.

      --
      Bow before me, for I am root.
    2. Re:The problem is the Patriot Act by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      Simple solution : Switch the America-based workers (who evidently still work for a company that operates under Canadian law) to using Canadian SaaS systems.

      It's a simple decision : if one software provider can't provide the software services you want (including complying with relevant laws), and another provider can provide ... you use the second provider, not the first. Well, Doh!

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  57. New Business Model for the US Gov't by FreakerSFX · · Score: 3, Funny

    They should offer data restores from the NSA for a price...

    * Accidentally delete an email? Just call the NSA and we'll send you a copy of it.

    --
    This sig contains a manual self-destruct. Kindly please put your foot through your monitor in 8 seconds.
    1. Re:New Business Model for the US Gov't by PuZZleDucK · · Score: 1

      I *so* would have used this service if it existed :D

      --
      Can a person program a new solution to a problem? Why should anyone be able to stop such a thing? -Richard Stallman
  58. The US is the last place I'd want to store my data by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    They seem to have the idea they own your data and will do whatever they want with it. It's not worth my time storing my data in a country that aspires to be Nazi Germany.

    Also Australia is about as far as you can get away from the US who is stupid enough to think they would want to pile on a load of latency on their transfer as well as risking the US government taking their data?

  59. Path of Least Resistance by andersh · · Score: 1

    I think that's probably more a matter of the path of least resistance.

    The US doesn't get its way at the expense of everyone else, just a little more in its favor sometimes. That's probably better than no progress at all in some areas. If the issue is of crucial importance even the US meets serious resistance (see ACTA, GM foods and WTO).

    The EU is also attempting to lead by policy, such as the RoHS directive, and increasingly becoming more proficient/successful at it. Similar to how California sets the standard for the US in many areas. There are [some]gains for the majority despite the consequences, and someone needs to take the lead.

    I am by no means an apologist for the US, I'm a European/Scandinavian, and while I have mixed emotions my aim is to be objective and try to view matters in a historical/anthropological perspective. It's obviously too broad a subject to answer with a few sentences :)

  60. Re:I work for a cloud provider. by davetv · · Score: 1

    "A Cloud" is data in the sky stored as quantum manipulated crystal droplets that occasionally crash with resultant wettening of everything, loud noises, and lotsa electricity we really didn't want or have facility to store right now.

  61. Re:If facts count at all, the Aussies are correct! by davetv · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm Australian and our company uses cloud models for some of our business - as per my other post - it would be crazy for an Australian company to host in USA. It isn't the latency ... that just sets an initial response delay. A lot of ppls in the "outback" have broadband via satellite ... database access assured but don't try and play quake :)

    Data retention, security, availability and backup are what we need. My ideal then is an Australian hosting company with exemplary credentials. We have that!.

    The USA has introduced laws and policies that withhold legitimate data from its owners. Even if costs were 50% ,given current US policy (we own EVERYTHING attitude), I don't think I can justify a business case that allows the hosting to be there. Megauploads serves as a perfect example.

  62. I thought by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1
    the cloud meant that anyways.

    sending negative messages about cloud providers based outside the country, implying that 'hosting data overseas, including in the United States, by definition entails greater risk and unduly exposes consumers to their data being scrutinized by foreign governments

    If someone not you has your data they have access to it as well. Common sense duh!

    --
    I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
  63. I still don't get why people use a cloud service by Pirulo · · Score: 1

    Unless you are very little and only need a tiny storage, makes no sense to have any cloud service.
    I have half rack for $400 / month plus about $500 / month in hardware deprecation (3 years),
    So far I got in 5 1u servers virtualized with proxmox, and several terabytes of storage.
    The equivalent computing / storing power in the cloud will be several thousand u$s,
    (more than $40k / month in e.g. a rackspace equivalent)

  64. Why bother under any circumstance? by dbIII · · Score: 1

    India is cheaper, closer, better connected to Australia (ie. a bit more than two anchor drags away from cut off and more total bandwidth at the best of times), and if a legal dispute goes international you are just as screwed if you have to get lawyers in country A or country B. Also the US government has made it very clear that they expect full access to your data with no legal recourse while other nations that respect the rule of law have not made that clear so there is an expectation that they won't go poking about.

    Sorry US providers, but your government has made it difficult for you to compete in that market. Better luck somewhere else.

    Personally I think that if any legal or access problems can't be solved by ringing somebody up in your own time zone then you are doing something wrong anyway. Hosting data in Australia for US use is just as stupid.

  65. typical by mrdtr · · Score: 1

    The USA isn't happy unless it has control over; copyrights, patents, oil, and I guess the attitude of other country to do it's own thing, even if it's within the law.