GoCloud News

Posts Tagged ‘Cloud Computing’

Partner Programme launched

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

After the successful launch of our Windows 7 Hosted Desktop solution it was only to be expected that many other solution providers would begin saying, “We want that for our customers!”

Well, now you can provide GoCloud’s Hosted Desktop for your important customers via our Partner Programme. The Hosted Desktop Partner Programme is going from strength to strength with a major player in the market ready to roll-out our Hosted Desktop solution to their customers during this April.

The Hosted Desktop Partner Programme offers companies the opportunity to resell our technology or earn a return for referrals. Here’s our press release on the Hosted Desktop Partner Programme.

Could hosted desktops have averted the risk to 43,000 Wigan school children?

Friday, September 4th, 2009

The mainstream media are quick to jump on any breaches of security involving cloud computing, and rightly so as security of personal and financial information should be of paramount importance to any organisation.

However, you are always left with the impression at the end of such stories that the more traditional way on storing the data, i.e. in-house servers and computers would have been more secure.

But the worrying tale from Wigan about the loss of a laptop containing the details of 43,000 local school children highlights circumstances in which a cloud computing and hosted desktop solution would have avoided this situation.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has found that Wigan Council breached data protection law by allowing unencrypted data on school children to be downloaded to a laptop that was subsequently stolen from a locked cupboard.

Humiliatingly, Joyce Redfearn, the CEO of Wigan Council, has had to sign an undertaking stating that the council will encrypt data on portable devices in future.

IT professionals will also be worried that so much personal data about children could be downloaded on mass by a council employee.

In fact, the head of enforcement at the ICO, Sally-Anne Poole did comment, “I strongly advise organisations to avoid instances where employees can download large volumes of personal information.”

Sally-Anne Poole continued, “This incident could have been averted if the data was simply accessed from the main council computer network. Storing large volumes of personal information on portable devices is unnecessarily risky.”

However, presumably the employee was in a position where they felt they would have need to access all the information while using the laptop and so downloaded so much sensitive information. Of course, if the information had been securely accessible to users from any remote location there would have been no need to allow this massive or any other partial download of such a sensitive database to any computer, let alone a device as vulnerable as a laptop.

The fact that the laptop was stolen from a locked cupboard also highlights the fact that data stored on a business’ premises is a lot more vulnerable to theft (and fire) than data stored in the highly secure UK data centres where servers used in cloud computing are situated.

Obviously here at GoCloud we would see this as an ideal situation for the use of a remotely hosted desktop solution so that the personal information would not have had to be downloaded to a laptop and yet the remotely hosted desktop would still enable the employee to securely access the information from a home computer or a thin clientin an alternative work location.

The legal risks in cloud computing

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Dan Burge, a partner at Denton Wilde Sapte takes a look at the legal risks involved in cloud computing.

While industry and commerce can easily see the cost-savings, flexibility, and scalability of cloud computing, there are a number of potential legal risks and issues that should be considered before implementation so that their potential threat to your business can be mitigated.

Read Dan’s full article on the potential legal liabilities involved in cloud computing in the UK and EU..

Latest Version of Virtual Bridges’ Open Virtual Desktop available

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Virtual Bridges, IBM and Canonical today announced the immediate availability of their newest version of the Linux-server based virtual desktop with the release of Virtual Bridges’ VERDE 2.0 software.

This Open Virtual Client Desktop is a combination of IBM’s Smart Client desktop software, Canonical’s Ubuntu Linux servers and desktop, and Virtual Bridges’ VERDE Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI).

VERDE 2.0 helps decrease cost by optimising existing resource, allowing enterprises to integrate Linux into their IT infrastructure without disrupting operations.

Virtual Bridges’ VERDE 2.0 delivers several industry firsts, including:

  • Addresses both private cloud and public cloud requirements.
  • Meets both the needs of the connected user and the disconnected user.
  • Simultaneously and seamlessly manages both Windows and Linux desktop sessions.

Click to continue reading the full story

“Shaping the Cloud Computing Opportunity” at HostingCon 2009

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

On August 11 2009, HostingCon 2009 will play host to Salesforce.com, Google, Microsoft Corp. and Rackspace in Washington D.C. for a future-shaping keynote presentation.

The title, “Shaping the Cloud Computing Opportunity” will peel-back the vision and growth expectations driving these technology giants into cloud computing.

Other hosted service providers including Parallels, VeriSign, NaviSite, and Network Solutions are also attending HostingCon to learn, network, and grow among their peers.

HostingCon, the largest conference and trade show for hosted service providers is being held in Washington D.C. from August 10 -12 at the Gaylord National Hotel and Conference Center on the Potomac.

Now in its fifth year, HostingCon brings together web hosts, data centres, software-as-a-service (SaaS) and other infrastructure providers who make the Internet work.

“HostingCon is an important event among hosted services professionals from around the world. It’s a good event for Microsoft to build trusted partnerships with hosting providers to help them deliver compelling new services for their customers,” said John Zanni, general manager of the Worldwide Software Plus Services Industry for the Communications Sector at Microsoft.

For more details about HostingCon, visit www.HostingCon.com

Popularity of cloud computing makes it more vulnerable?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

The Networks Solutions hack attack, which may have netted over 570,000 credit card details may be the first of many targeted at the giant networks using cloud computing says Amichai Shulman, chief technology officer of data security specialists Imperva

Shulman said, “the basic problem is that the rise of cloud computing, with many more companies now hosting their data on the Internet, makes such databases and the servers they are hosted on, phenomenally attractive.

“The attackers here aimed on the big prize, the servers. Instead of dealing with a site here and there, once they broke into the hosting servers and all the sites were open to them.

“The lesson: once you’ve penetrated the cloud, you’ve got an easy path to the important, underlying data.”

Network Solutions says that malware planted on its servers appears to be at the heart of the data loss. Click the following link for the full story of the Networks Solutions security breach.

Cloud computing, when properly set-up, isn’t any more inherently dangerous than any other form or remote data storage or hosting, it is simply that some ecommerce server networks that store up to 10,000 ecommerce sites are a tasty single target for hackers.

If the malware was planted because of slow patch vulnerability application by the IT guys it may be that big is not beautiful in cloud computing?

Smaller cloud computing networks will have fewer servers to keep patched and updated and can do so more quickly and they are inherently less of a target as they contain less financially useful information.

But whatever the size, cloud computing will be safer than their own servers – surveys have shown that vulnerability patches can take between 25 and 55 days to be applied by a company’s own IT departments to their own servers!