The end game for OEMs, carriers and content providers.
1. Data mining
Data mining
for what? Simply donning a tinfoil hat and screaming "data mining" does not making a valid fear. With any service there will be a EULA about what they can and cannot do with your data. We have several cloud-based applications and data services here at work. Guess what? We have agreements with the vendors about what they are allowed to do with our data. Basically, nothing. They are not allowed to touch, look at, copy, move or otherwise interact with our data in any way.
You can argue the trust point all day, but you put your trust in various service providers all day long so I don't think it's a valid argument.
2. Data cap breaches. Carriers are banking on this, since more cloud usage equals more cap breaches and or upgrages of data plans. Seems silly that people would fall for that, but does not take much of a percent for the install base to generate serious revenue.
Fair point. I think it's up to the buyers to deal with, though. The providers are giving out the tools to monitor your data usage. I don't see why this is different than, say, electricity. More and more devices are getting plugged in at our houses every day, does every manufacturer have to protect the consumer from having high electric bills?
3. More control of content used by the consumer, plus usage rights.
This is not a cohesive argument. What do you mean, "plus usage rights"? How are they leveraging control of content?
4. Cheaper cost for the OEM, since less flash storage or ports on the devices (as an aggregate).
Good, they're gouging the f**k out of consumers on flash storage. $100 more for a few extra bucks worth of flash chips soldered onto the motherboard? These are hardware costs and reductions are passed onto the consumers or are made up for in other features.
Do you folks honestly think the intent of data clouds are for the good of the consumer? Seems the opposite of good, unless consumers are continued to be offered choices of if they want it or not.
I am going to assume you do not work in the IT space? The point of "the cloud" is to leverage massive amounts of computing resources in an efficient, scalable, distributed and highly available system. There's no conspiracy. This is better for EVERYONE. CPU cycles are not going to waste, information is available from everywhere with an internet connection, and you get to - oh, say, store your music distributed across many data centers. Please, tell me, how would you manage to maintain geographically separate copies of your data on an ongoing basis in secure, highly available places that keep high-bandwidth connections online all the time?
I'm a photographer. I have hundreds of gigabytes of photos. Prior to cloud storage coming into its own, I had to do the time consuming task of burning DVDs every month or backing up to drives and physically transporting these items to the people who would store them for me. If I needed them, they would have to be physically transported back. Now, I have them stored online, all the time, in encrypted archives and separate physical locations. That's not a backup you can make as an individual.
Also, I don't understand your fear about not having choices. Do you see any trend away from large storage blocks? The Nexus is coming with 32gb of internal storage. That's not exactly restrictive. True, the media hounds might want something bigger, but you can't get much bigger than that right now since MicroSD cards are only 32gb at the moment.
Do folks not find it interesting that the carriers are crying about bandwidth and network costs, but they at the same time are guiding people into cloud content which requires more bandwidth than locally stored content?
Carriers are not crying about bandwidth. They were making the valid claim that wireless data is extremely expensive and that unlimited data plans were not sustainable. Anyone who doesn't agree with that argument doesn't understand network infrastructure - simple.
At the same time pushing 4G devices, even though new users must pay $30 for 2 teeny gigs?
I agree that 2gb is too small heading into an age of 4G technology.
And to support their rationale, they use data usage trends based on years of data with a heavy bias of 2G and non Android phone use.
Would you like them to use data usage trends on non-existant phone usage? Usage patterns change, but you need to analyze them as they change and adjust. There isn't a large market of 4G phones yet. Data caps will go up in the near future.