Microsoft's Danger SideKick data loss casts dark on cloud computing

October 11th, 2009

Daniel Eran Dilger

Microsoft has demonstrated that the dark side of cloud computing has 
no silver linings. After a major server outage occurred on its watch 
last weekend, users dependent on the company have just been informed 
that their personal data and photos "has almost certainly been lost."

Microsoft's Danger SideKick data loss casts dark on cloud computing

While occasional service outages have hit nearly everyone in the 
business, knocking Google's Gmail offline for hours, plunging RIM's 
BlackBerrys into the dark, or leaving Apple's MobileMe web apps 
unreachable to waves of users, Microsoft's high profile outage has 
impacted users in the worst possible way: the company has 
unrecoverable lost nearly all of its users' data, and now has no 
alternative backup plan for recovering any of it a week later.

The outage and data loss affects all SideKick customers of the Danger 
group Microsoft purchased in early 2008. Danger maintained a 
significant online services business for T-Mobile's SideKick users. 
All of T-Mobile's SideKick phone users rely on Danger's online 
service to supply applications such as contacts, calendars, IM and 
SMS, media player, and other features of the device, and to store the 
data associated with those applications.

When Microsoft's Danger servers began to fall offline last Friday 
October 2, users across the country couldn't even use the services; 
even after functionality was beginning to be brought back on Tuesday 
October 6, users still didn't have their data back. This Saturday, 
after a week of efforts to solve the crisis, T-Mobile finally 
announced to its SideKick subscribers:

"Regrettably, based on Microsoft/Danger's latest recovery assessment 
of their systems, we must now inform you that personal information 
stored on your device - such as contacts, calendar entries, to-do 
lists or photos - that is no longer on your Sidekick almost certainly 
has been lost as a result of a server failure at Microsoft/Danger."

A new report from Engadget says that T-Mobile has suspended sales of 
its SideKick models and is warning: "Sidekick customers, during this 
service disruption, please DO NOT remove your battery, reset your 
Sidekick, or allow it to lose power."

...

http://www.roughlydrafted.com/2009/10/11/microsofts-danger-sidekick-data-loss-casts-dark-on-cloud-computing/

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