Cloud Computing: SpiderOak Takes Novel Approach To Data Privacy

August 2, 2013 Off By David
Object Storage

Grazed from InformationWeek. Author: Thomas Claburn.

Ethan Oberman has a problem with cloud computing. "A person should be able to use cloud technologies without relinquishing his or her privacy," explained Oberman, CEO of cloud storage service SpiderOak, in a phone interview. Given Internet companies that rely on mining data about users for revenue, government agencies that have the capability to monitor online activities and read personal communications, businesses seeking competitive intelligence, and hackers hammering at the data piggy banks, maintaining a comfortable degree of privacy isn’t easy.

The problem is that cryptography isn’t easy. Cryptography doesn’t ensure security. It’s merely an element of a broader security strategy. But it has become a necessary element, given the inadequacy of perimeter-based protection. Because barriers can be penetrated or bypassed, data deserves additional protection…

SpiderOak is one of a handful of companies that have adopted a "zero-knowledge" approach to cloud computing services: It does not keep copies of users’ encryption keys, so it cannot provide access to a user’s files on demand or otherwise. From a liability and compliance perspective, ignorance is bliss…

Read more from the source @ http://www.informationweek.com/security/privacy/spideroak-takes-novel-approach-to-data-p/240159315