Weathering the Storm: The Policy Implications of Cloud Computing
Grimes, Justin M.; Jaeger, Paul T.; Lin, Jimmy
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/15340
Description
Title
Weathering the Storm: The Policy Implications of Cloud Computing
Author(s)
Grimes, Justin M.
Jaeger, Paul T.
Lin, Jimmy
Issue Date
2009-02-08
Keyword(s)
Cloud computing
Information Policy
Information Ethics
Abstract
"Throughout the history of computing, there have been sev-
eral paradigm shifts from main-frames to mini computing to
microprocessing to networked computers. On track to be the
next major paradigm shift is that of cloud computing. While
the de nitions are still being debated (see: http://videos.
techielife.com/what-is-cloud-computing/video-online/
2008/11/13), fundamentally, cloud computing can be de-
ned as a push in designing services where information is
stored and processed on the Internet (i.e., \the cloud"") usu-
ally via massive large scale data centers which can be ac-
cessed remotely through various clients and platforms [18,
2]. Cloud computing itself has often been referred to as a
conglomeration of ideas such as Software as a Service, Web
2.0, grid computing, and utility computing [2]. In essence,
cloud computing is an umbrella concept which attempts to
synthesize and encapsulate this over arching movement of
access anywhere, process anywhere while abstracting the en-
tire process to the user masking it in the cloud."
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