Is cloud good or bad for your work-life balance, and does it really forfeit your privacy?

It’s not an uncommon circumstance for people to scope out social media profiles – prospective employers for example – when they want to get a feel for a personality.

But, as people flock to the cloud for business and pleasure, is it really possible to keep clouds separate, and, have we actually found ourselves ‘living in the cloud’?

Data can be stored on the cloud in many different ways, and as we go along with our lives, we find that we store more and more on the cloud every day.

Ever since the introduction of tablets and unlimited data storage on the cloud, it has become a norm for us to find our photos, our music, documents and any number of other articles of data sitting on the cloud.

We, as a population, use the internet on a daily basis for a wide variety of purposes, including for the transmission of sensitive data, and are we giving a second thought to the safety and security of our information?

>See also: Does depleting privacy equate to the end of liberty? Why every business must watch this Edward Snowden documentary

In general, individuals and businesses use the internet for purposes including social media, research, entertainment, banking, communication, download and upload, amongst many other things.

Many people, if not most, have a general attitude of complacency when it comes to using the internet – and their first thought when it comes to logging on is not about how safe their data is.

That thought is most likely way down at the bottom, if not off the list completely, behind thoughts surrounding social communication, business and commerce.

The question that should be on the lips of most business owners, and individuals, should be whether their data is ever really safe and what they can be doing to ensure that it is so.

One thing to note is that safety should not simply cover theft, whether that is virtual or physical theft; it should also cover natural disasters, accidental loss or damage, and any other circumstance that could lead to a business or individual losing important or sensitive data.

It is one thing to experiment with the cloud, working it out slowly and discovering whether or not you really think it’s for you, but it’s a completely different kettle of fish to find yourself pushed into using it by circumstance.

Damage your computer or network server and you may find yourself forced into relying on the cloud for every little thing while your top speed iMac is in the repair shop and you’re stuck with a loaned PC for a week.

What you might not realise is that to some extent you are already living on the cloud and the best move you can make from here is to surrender to the concept of relying on the cloud, and allow yourself and your business to engage completely.

The cloud will eventually become the most important aspect of people’s work lives, as much as it has become the central sphere for the personal lives of every social media user in the world.

Businesses that are resistant to this shift are only delaying the inevitable, and in fact, by resisting the move to the cloud they will only make their business more vulnerable than those that are enjoying the security and the benefits of the cloud.

Businesses are apprehensive of allowing their entire operation to function out of the cloud, but by being smart about where the data is kept and which security measures they take to protect and back up information, the cloud can become the safest to store files and folders.

Data managed on the cloud is easier to protect from any kind of physical threat, and with certain measures in place it will also receive more protection against power surges, cyber-attacks and any technological fault.

US businesses spend billions of dollars per year on protecting themselves against cyber threats and breaches, and it wouldn’t be surprising if UK laws soon followed laws set in the USA which force companies to implement security features around their cloud usage.

Recent government guidance made reference to the data protection responsibilities of companies that back up devices to the cloud, and due to high-profile security breaches regarding customer data – it is likely that this will remain a hot topic.

That is company data but what about data accumulated by individuals? People rely on cloud-based storage for social media channels such as Facebook and Twitter, and employers have started using these sources to research potential employees and to discover more about these people through these sites.   

Does this mean, therefore, that by living on the cloud people are no longer entitled to a private life that is entirely removed from our professional living, or can they keep their personal and professional lives separate?

Cloud living does, unfortunately, mean that there is more chance of privacy being breached by employers, which will tempt some people to choose to remain entirely professional on the internet.

However, some will argue that what people do on the internet and outside of the office is an entirely separate segment of their lives and no reflection on their professional manner.

Those in particularly influential careers such as teaching or public service will often consider using the most secure privacy features on all of their social media channels, using different names and making their profiles unsearchable.

While these are successful measures when it comes to ensuring personal privacy, living on the cloud has made it necessary to think about the confidentiality of out-of-hours activities – something which would not have been a passing thought to anybody not in the public eye before the introduction of cloud storage.

Has living on the cloud taken things too far, or is this a new level of normality that we will have to become used to?  Judging by the way that things are going, it is the latter, which is why it is even more important that cloud security is of the highest grade.

Cloud storage is as much of a consideration for individuals as it is for businesses, and it is perhaps this work-life balance that is increasingly seeing people juggling their privacy between the two sections of their daily existence.

Information technology has led to huge advances in the quest for an equal work-life balance, including allowing software that enables employees to work on projects both in the office and at home, email clients that synchronise to home and work, and instant messaging programs that can alert a smartphone should you not be in the office.

At first glance, these measures sound like the perfect solution to the pulls from both home and work, but does this mean that we are simply living on the cloud, making ourselves available to anybody, anywhere we are, no matter what we are doing?

>See also: The privacy paradoxes: what businesses need to know

Accessing a work network while at home, and being able to get hold of your home stuff remotely, will certainly have its advantages, but it will also mean that those spare 20 minutes in between putting the kids to bed and making dinner could be easily seized by work, unbalancing the scales of work and private time.

On the other hand, those 20 minutes might be exactly what are needed to finish off a project that wasn’t completed in the office because you had to leave early to do the school run.

In order to achieve a more equal work-life balance, it would seem that people are now literally living on the cloud, relying on cloud storage for almost every aspect of their being, including communication, business, entertainment and even finances.

While this would seem to be a good thing, and is the next logical step in making use of the world’s evolving technology, individuals and businesses should think about how this will affect their privacy, their security and their lives. While a cloud might be comfortable to sit on, if it bursts a hard landing awaits.

 

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Ben Rossi

Ben was Vitesse Media's editorial director, leading content creation and editorial strategy across all Vitesse products, including its market-leading B2B and consumer magazines, websites, research and...

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