Amazon’s Cloud Accounts Carry Unsecured Data

Amazon’s Cloud Accounts Carry Unsecured DataSecurity can be said to be of paramount importance when it comes to your personal data and private information, and when you decide to upload stuff to the cloud, you would surely be taking a risk that there is a remote possibility of a hack or security breach by outsiders. Of course, it does not help that it has been discovered that when probed Amazon’s S3 servers which hosts their cloud, offers nearly 2,000 unique S3 “buckets” that were left open to the public, and if translated to plain English, these “buckets” carry unsecured passwords, photos and other personal files.

It must be said that Amazon did set S3 accounts to private by default, although these buckets can still be opened to the public manually, or it ended up this way as a misconfiguration. Of course, the issues are no more than user error, but upon realizing what was discovered, Amazon has stepped out by treating this particular matter with a sense of urgency, and has started to warn its users that their files could jolly well be publicly accessible. Hence, Amazon has started to put “measures in place to proactively identify misconfigured files and buckets moving forward.”

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Lenovo ThinkPad Helix Ready For Delivery, Gemini Could Be Future Microsoft Office Product,

Google Compute Engine brings Linux virtual machines ‘at Google scale’

As anticipated, Google has just launched its cloud service for businesses at Google I/O 2012, called Google Compute Engine. Starting today Urs Holzle announced “anyone with large-scale computing needs” can access the infrastructure and efficiency of Google’s datacenters. The company is promising both performance and stability — Amazon EC2 they’re coming for you — claiming “this is how infrastructure as a service is supposed to work”. It’s also promising “50 percent more computes per dollar” than competitors. Beta testers will be on hand at later meetings to give impressions of the service, if you want to know how running your apps on 700,000 (and counting) cores feels. During the presentation we got a demo of a genome app and we’re sure if we understood what was going on, it would have been impressive. Hit the source links below for more details on “computing without limits” or to sign up for a test yourself.

Check the live blog for more details as they’re revealed.

Check out our full coverage of Google I/O 2012’s developer conference at our event hub!

Google Compute Engine brings Linux virtual machines ‘at Google scale’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 13:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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