Iron Mountain going back to roots in storage services

Iron Mountain going back to roots in storage services
Company changes direction, considers selling off digital business
By Lucas Mearian
April 27, 2011 06:00 AM ET

Computerworld – A week after Iron Mountain announced it had replaced its CEO, the company said it’s considering selling its archiving, e-discovery and online backup and recovery business to return to its roots in document and tape storage services.

“There’s no guarantee a deal will get done because we’re still early in the process, but we have good interest. And as you can imagine these processes take a matter of a few months, before we know it will unwind itself,” said Richard Reese, who abruptly took over as CEO on April 14. Continue reading

Why hackers and spooks want our heads in the cloud

by John Harris, Guardian, guardian.co.uk, Monday 25 April 2011 20.00 BST

Our unthinking embrace of these giant data centres is throttling the giddy anti-authoritarian computing dream

Imagine this. A notorious multinational is on the lookout for new business. For the sake of argument, let’s imagine it’s Lockheed Martin, the defence, security, and “advanced technology” corporation that has lately been seeing to the census. From somewhere in their R&D division comes an idea: “personal lifestyle security services” for millions across the planet. The wheeze is simple enough: sign up and hand them your personal correspondence, financial records, bank details, ID documents, and more. They’ll have all your stuff, and you’ll have a unique password whenever you want a look. And just think: more clutter shunted out of your life, leaving you to glide through the minimalist bliss of 21st century living. Continue reading

Defogging the Cloud: Applying Fourth Amendment Principles to Evolving Privacy Expectations in Cloud Computing

by David A. Couillard
93 Minn. L. Rev. 2205 (2009)

It took nearly a century after the invention of the telephone for the Supreme Court to recognize that the Fourth Amendment could be applied to the content of private telephone conversations. Today, the Internet is in a similar state of limbo, with courts reluctant to grant Fourth Amendment protection to data placed in a medium that has been perceived as inherently public in nature. This perception has begun to shift as Internet technology becomes faster, more widespread, and more mobile. “Cloud computing” is the trendy phrase used to describe this change. Rather than merely a medium of mass communication, the ethereal Internet “cloud” is now used as a virtual platform for storing and interacting with data that are intended to remain private yet accessible anywhere. Although some courts have recently recognized limited protection for e-mails and text messages, these narrow holdings are not universal. The third-party doctrine further complicates the issue when content and quasi-transactional data are being stored by cloud service providers. Continue reading