Professionally or personally (got my idea from this thread).

Maybe it’s because I don’t work with it directly, but I don’t see the benefits other than people not wanting to manage the servers themselves. It adds complexity (eg SQL Server vs SSAS) while putting your data behind some amorphous entity where you don’t know what goes on.

And for communists it’s a privacy nightmare. Convenience shouldn’t be a selling point when you have no idea what anything you’re putting up there is bring used for or if it’s accessed at all. Google Drive, Telegram, Discord, have all been said that they use “The Cloud”™️ and make it easier for people to use.

We live in a world where tech envelops almost every aspect of our lives, yet the amount if basic knowledge people have is abysmal. There really needs to be attempts to taking computers seriously and not assuming everything is friendly. People should be aware that “The Cloud”™️ means some corporate entity controls your data, that “encrypted” messaging is not safe when done through software controlled by Facebook, or that using Windows puts your trust entirely in a company that has never deserved it.

  • freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 years ago

    The cloud is amazing for businesses.

    For personal, the reality is that we have not spent enough time as a society figuring how to make residences into self-organzing utility nodes. Every residence needs to control its own data and compute infrastructure. We have the tech for it, but we don’t design for the citizen to be in full control over their assets.

    We even have some breakthroughs in mutatable crypto that would allow us to superposition a distributed cloud on top of citizen hardware without any data exposure.

    But the pressures of military intelligence requires centralization. And a revolution isn’t going to change that any time soon.