http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/09/why-the-nsa-loves-googles-chromebook/
By Sean Gallagher
Ars Technica
Sept 11 2013
As Andrew Cunningham reported today, Intel and Google are announcing an
upcoming onslaught of new Google Chromebooks based on Intel's Haswell
architecture processors. The idea of a cloud-tethered notebook that can
keep its owner connected over Wi-Fi and broadband all day long -- in some
cases for less than the price of a shiny new Apple iPhone -- is going to
be awfully appealing to many.
And without a doubt, no one will be happier than the National Security
Agency (NSA) and law enforcement. While Google's cloud computing has
provided a platform for the company to grab a big chunk of the low-cost
notebook market and upend Microsoft's Windows applecart, the recent NSA
leaks by Edward Snowden have put the cloud under... a cloud.
There are some places where this isn't going to necessarily have much
impact on Google's market ascension. Google has steamrollered the
education market with Google Apps, and the low-cost Chromebook is a
natural fit for the classroom. My middle-school-aged daughter now is
required to have a Google account for school so she can be linked into her
teacher's shared documents; the Chromebook's connection to Google
credentials means that she can share a device with classmates and the
school doesn't need IT support to provision accounts on them.
The Chromebook is also an interesting development platform in many ways --
the recent functional additions to the Google Apps platform have made it
more developer friendly, and collaborative applications live much more
happily in a cloud-connected environment than they do in synchronized
caches on devices scattered from here to hell and back.
[...]
--
Find the best InfoSec talent without breaking your
recruiting budget! Post a Job, $99 for 31 days.
Hot InfoSec Jobs - http://www.hotinfosecjobs.com/