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How 'The Cloud' Eats Away at Your Online Privacy (Video)

Tom Henderson, Principal Researcher at ExtremeLabs Inc., is not a cloud fan. He is a staunch privacy advocate, and this is the root of his distrust of companies that store your data in their memories instead of yours. You can get an idea of his (dis)like of vague cloud privacy protections and foggy vendor service agreements from the fact that his Network World columnn is called Thumping the Clouds. We called Tom specifically to ask him about a column entry titled The downside to mass data storage in the cloud.

Today's video covers only part of what Tom had to say about cloud privacy and information security, but it's still an earful and a half. His last few lines are priceless. Watch and listen, or at least read the transcript, and you'll see what we mean.

6 of 86 comments (clear)

  1. Another worthless video article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    a) everyone on Slashdot knows that "cloud" and "your privacy" are contradictory
    b) hint, people not on Slashdot won't see the article, so posting it is irrelevant
    c) video articles suck balls, nobody wants to hear some dork talk when they could read the piece in 1/4 of the time

  2. Today's Headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Old man yells at cloud

    1. Re:Today's Headline by Enry · · Score: 2

      clod yells at cloud

  3. The Google Plus logo by Roman+Mamedov · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Google Plus logo in the corner gives this video a special kind of hilarity.

  4. Thank you, Tom Henderson by itzly · · Score: 4, Funny

    Your facial features, voice and speech patterns have now been included in the cloud databases. Thank you for your cooperation.

  5. More people should self host by Karmashock · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have a raspberry pi that I use to host a personal website. It is just for me and a couple friends and it associates a free subdomain with my home dynamic IP.

    I have access to my home movie and music library anywhere, can remote into my home systems whenever I want from my phone, and can host any file I want on line without having to give it to a third party.

    That's the trick. Remove the third party.

    Is it more expensive to self host? Not really. I want these things stored locally anyway. So I just link my local drives to the pi. So self hosting cost me about 25 dollars... total and done.

    The only thing I use the cloud for is offsite backups and only of a few critical things.

    Beyond that, why involve a third party?

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.