Categories: Channel NewsIT Trends

Government Snoopers Scare Off Cloud Customers: Report

Half of all IT professionals aren’t buying into cloud services – and government snoopers know exactly which half, because its their fault, says a report. Suspicions of omnipotent Big Brotherly monitoring of sensitive and private cloud data is killing interest in the cloud computing sector, according to Lieberman Software.

The fear of government intervention, and possible legal action, is a massive deterrent to anyone thinking of taking advantage of the efficiency of cloud computing, according to Lieberman’s study.

Spooked cloud

The vendor quizzed IT and cloud experts on their attitude to storing data in the cloud. It discovered that in 48 per cent of cases, government and legal interference stops them entering the cloud environment. No IT manager can be sure if sensitive company data is safe from civil servants, according to Philip Lieberman, CEO of Lieberman Software. As a result, they cannot guarantee to satisfy the IT security audits or the government’s own regulatory checks to which all hosted cloud environments must be subjected.

“Government surveillance, cloud legislation and data security are the key issues,” said Lieberman. “IT managers fear they’ll put their data at risk by moving to a cloud provider.” If their data is unprotected, their job is unprotected, he said.

Recent cases in which the police have sold confidential information to journalists and the DVLA has sold information to private clamping firms do not inspire confidence. “Who wants governments snooping around in their corporate data?” said Lieberman.

Lieberman outlined the cloud computing nightmare that keeps many IT managers awake at night. “If a government or official body wanted to see what data a company was holding in the cloud, the cloud host involved would be legally obliged to provide them with access,” said Lieberman. “There is very limited privacy in cloud environments. IT managers know it is much easier to hide data within their own private networks.”

Nick Booth

Recent Posts

Flashpoint enters new chapter with global partner programme

Security vendor Flashpoint debuts partner programme following $28m funding

7 years ago

Channel partner “disconnect” hindering growth

Complex buying journeys and sprawling partner networks hampering customer experience, says Accenture

7 years ago

Cyxtera launches global channel partner programme

Datacentre provider Cyxtera says launch is “milestone in our go-to-market strategy”

7 years ago

US IT provider brings mainframe services to UK

Ensono highlights importance of mainframes still to major industries

7 years ago

VASCO and Nuvias expand distribution across EMEA

Security vendor VASCO looks to replicate UK and German set up across EMEA

7 years ago

Splunk says channel investments driving growth

Splunk details investment in Partner+ programme at .conf2017

7 years ago