Regulating the Cloud: Policy for Computing Infrastructure
Regulating the Cloud: Policy for Computing Infrastructure
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Abstract
Cloud computing has emerged as one of the most salient recent developments in information technology. Predictions about its future run the gamut, with some believing that it represents a fundamental change the nature of computing and others arguing that it is nothing more than overhyped repackaging of existing technologies. This book represents the first effort to bridge this gap by exploring cloud computing’s implications from a wide range of interdisciplinary perspectives. Individual chapters analyze the business case for cloud computing, the changing nature of reliability in the Internet, the implications of treating the Internet as critical infrastructure, architectural changes to make cloud computing more contractible, and the impact of cloud computing on copyright, privacy, and consumer protection.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Computing’s Infrastructural Moment
Jean-François Blanchette
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1
Cloud Strategy and Economics
Joe Weinman
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2
Finding Security in the Clouds
Marjory S. Blumenthal
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3
Reliability and the Internet Cloud
William Lehr
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4
Cloud Computing, Contractibility, and Network Architecture
Christopher S. Yoo
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5
Cloud Privacy Law in the United States and the European Union
Andrea Renda
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6
Understanding Regulatory and Consumer Interest in the Cloud
Jonathan Cave and others
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7
Digital Records and Archives in the Commercial Cloud
Luciana Duranti
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8
Software Copyright in the Cloud1
Lothar Determann andDavid Nimmer
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9
Bodies in the Cloud: A Geography of Electronic Health Data
Nicholas Bauch
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Conclusion: The State of Cloud Computing Policy
Sandra Braman
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End Matter
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