this post was submitted on 26 Apr 2024
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Privacy

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.today/post/9850201

Image Late January, the U.S. Department of Commerce published a notice of proposed rulemaking for establishing new requirements for Infrastructure as a Service providers (IaaS) . The proposal boils down to a 'Know Your Customer' regime for companies operating cloud services, with the goal of countering the activities of "foreign malicious actors." Yet, despite an overseas focus, Americans won't be able to avoid the proposal's requirements, which covers CDNs, virtual private servers, proxies, and domain name resolution services, among others.

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[–] ShellMonkey@lemmy.socdojo.com 26 points 6 months ago (1 children)

That'll only ever pass of the big cloud vendors allow it. No way that Azure/AWS/Google wouldn't object if a sizable portion of their user base get upset and threaten to leave. How much of that user base argues is unknown though.

[–] possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 21 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

The money makers for large clouds are companies. They won't care about this legislation

[–] ShellMonkey@lemmy.socdojo.com 7 points 6 months ago

Generally yes, it would matter a lot how it was structured. Today you couldn't call up AWS and ask for the details on a service owner out of privacy reasons and there are ways to register things by proxy. If they started stripping those kind of protections away though there's bound to be some pushback.