"Microsoft is tired of waiting for
the United States government to rein in the National Security Agency so
it’s taking matters into its own hands.
The Financial Times reports that
Microsoft
“will allow foreign customers to have their personal data stored on
servers outside the U.S.,” a move that other tech companies such as
Google have so far resisted due to cost concerns.
However, Microsoft’s general counsel Brad Smith tells The Financial Times
that “people should have the ability to know whether their data are
being subjected to the laws and access of governments in some other
country and should have the ability to make an informed choice of where
their data resides.”
That Microsoft is willing to go this far shows how much the
NSA spying scandal has damaged trust between American tech companies and their international customers.
Microsoft even took the unusual step
late last year of classifying the United States government as “advanced
persistent threat” to its customers’ security, a designation that the
company normally uses only cyber terrorists sponsored by foreign
governments."
--------------------------quote ends-------------------------------------------------------
Jim Bell's comment begins:
Well, I suppose it's desirable that such big companies talk like they're fighting back against USG/NSA, but their final 'bite' had better be far more serious and definitive than their current 'bark'.
Jim Bell