> In a cloud hosting environment, you typically don't know where your
> data and servers are, and thus you don't know what legal and political
> pressures they may be subject to. If that means that in practice you
> are subject to the combination of any pressure that can be applied to
> any one of the hosting centers maintained by your hosting provider,
> then "the cloud" indeed would seem pretty unattractive to anyone with
> politically or socially controversial content.

How is it more or less unattractive than having one's own servers in one's own 
office?  Lieberman and Co would simply have leaned on Mom's Best BGP (r) and 
Pop's Fastest Packets (r) instead of on Amazon, and the result would have been 
the same.

That's the catch with this here series of tubes - you don't control all of the 
tubes, even if you're Amazon, or Giant National ISP Co, or Massive National 
Fiber Plant Co.  The server infrastructure is the least interesting part of 
what happened to WikiLeaks.

Nathan


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