Jun 04 2013
CounterPunch: The “Cloudy” Skies Corporations Want to Sell You
It’s the nature of the shallow, consumer-driven, dream-drunken culture our society tries to impose on us that we popularly adopt terms without knowing what they mean and, more often than not, they don’t mean much of anything.
Such is the case with “the Cloud”.
Most people who use computers believe they know what it is except that everyone seems to have a different definition. From a satellite-based storage system to a virtually invisible network to a collection of hard drives all over the world to a new form of storage that doesn’t require computers to…whatever new definition pops up this week. In any case, you have heard of the “cloud” and probably aren’t sure what it really is.
This week, the Army announced it would be putting its Defense Cross-Domain Analytical Capability — a database storing various kinds of “security-relevant” information — on the Cloud. This surprising development indicates a level of maturity for Cloud computing that could be important for us all, in a contradictory way. We are closer than ever to being able to build a completely de-centralized and privacy-protected Internet network and that is a development we all should be actively supporting. Unsurprisingly, it’s a development corporations are frantically seeking to prevent or control.
To understand all this, you have to first understand what “cloud storage” actually is and to do that you have to divert your eyes from the sky. That’s not where you’ll find it — no satellites or “non-wired data transfer” or invisible storage devices. It’s not the complete break with previous Internet technology some think it is. In fact, it’s not even new.
A “cloud” is nothing more than a bunch of computers linked by a network. There’s no consensus about how it got its name, although companies are more than happy to avoid correcting people’s misinterpretations. But we know how it was developed. It’s a simple “protocol” (a system of computer commands) that allows for the automatic and rapid sharing of information across a network based on the division of files into smaller packages. In short, while you think you claim a precise place for all your files (a kind of personal hard drive in space) when you rent a piece of the “cloud”, you’re giving your files to a provider so they can be chopped up and stored on several computers in the provider’s network.
This allows a provider to use its space efficiently and serve up your stored files quickly. If a particular storage computer is being overloaded with attempts to store information on it or retrieve information from it, the traditional storage computer would slow down or even crash. But with Cloud technology, the provider can route your request to many computers on which your file is stored and “distribute” the demand with each storage device on the network taking on a bit of the “load”. It’s a like a team pulling a heavy object and it all happens automatically and in a flash.
Neat, huh? Companies sure think so and they’re selling the service aggressively. They also have all kinds of products that afford an expansion of the basic storage services. For a higher price, for example, you can store your own software or share the software you and other cloudsters routinely use. So with this enhanced Cloud product, your computer’s hard drive can be almost empty.
This is a newer version of an old protocol called “dumb computer networking” in which your computer is not much more than a screen, a keyboard and a connection to the central server. All the computers on the network use that server as their hard drive. That’s the way a lot of companies still work, keeping their employees from using their own workstations for personal communication (or writing a novel on company’s time) and also making “owership” of that data unquestioned and unassailable. When they use the Cloud, it’s as a back-up of their data.
That’s also the way most individuals use it although they store stuff on their own hard drives. For them, the Cloud provides a safe and secure back-up storage that’s immune to the data-loss resulting from that dreaded incident all of us have experienced: the hard drive crash.
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