---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Reuven Cohen <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, May 28, 2009 at 9:19 PM
Subject: RumorMill: Amazon to Open Source Web Services API's?
To: [email protected]


I usually try to avoid posting rumors but this one is particularly
interesting, I first heard about it a few weeks back but recently had
independent confirmation. Word is Amazon's legal team is currently
"investigating" open sourcing their various web services API's including
EC2, S3 etc. (The rumor has not been officially confirmed by Amazon, but my
sources are usually pretty good)

If true, this move makes a lot of sense for a number of reasons. The first
and foremost is it would help foster the adoption of Amazon's API's which
are already the de facto
standards<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_facto_standard>used by
hundreds of thousands of AWS customers around the globe thus
solidifying Amazons position as the market leader.

By actually giving their stamp of approval, they would be in a sense
officially giving the opportunity for other players to embrace the interface
methods while keeping the actual implementation (their secret sauce) a
secret. If anything this may really help Amazon win over Enterprise
customers by enabling an ecosystem of compatible "private cloud" products
and services that could seamlessly move between Amazon's Public Cloud and
existing data center infrastructure.

This would also continue the momentum started by a number of
competitors/partners who have begun adopting the various AWS API's including
Sun Microsystems in their Open Cloud
Platform<http://www.sun.com/solutions/cloudcomputing/index.jsp>and the
*EUCALYPTUS <http://eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu/> project*.

>From a legal standpoint this would help negate some of the concerns around
API liability. Amazon is known to have an extensive patent portfolio and in
past has not been afraid to enforce it. A clear policy regarding the use of
their API's would certainly help companies that up until now have been
reluctant to adopt them.

Lastly this provides the opportunity to foster a ecosystem of API driven
applications to emerge (*EUCALYPTUS <http://eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu/> is
perfect example). * Another possible opportunity I wrote about awhile back
is the creation of a Universal EC2 API adapter
(UEC2)<http://www.elasticvapor.com/2009/03/universal-amazon-ec2-api-adapter-uec2.html>that
* could plug into your existing infrastructure tools and is completely
platform agnostic.

*At the heart of this concept is a universal EC2 abstraction, similar to
ODBC <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ODBC>, (a platform-independent database
abstraction layer). Like ODBC a user could install the specific EC2
api-implementation, through which a lightweight EC2 API daemon (Think
Libvirt <http://libvirt.org/>) is able to communicate with traditional
virtual infrastructure platforms such as VMware, Xen, Hyper-V etc using a
standardized EC2 API. The user then has the ability to have their EC2
specific applications communicate directly with any infrastructure using
this EC2 Adapter. The adapter then relays the results back and forth between
the the other various infrastructure platforms & API's. Maybe it's time for
me to get moving on this concept.

May a thousand Clouds bloom.

Reuven
CCIF Instigator


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