The BSA released the BSA Global Cloud Computing scorecard report showing that China ranked fourth in the bottom 47.5 points
June 18 News, according to the Commercial Software Alliance (Business Software Alliance) released by the "BSA Global Cloud Computing Scorecard" Report, China's cloud computing power ranked fourth, Brazil penultimate, while Japan and http://www.aliyun.com/ Zixun/aggregation/14583.html "> Australia separated positive one or two digits.
The report assesses cloud computing power in 24 countries, which account for 80% of the global economy. The Business Software Alliance assesses the degree of integration of a country with a globalized market in seven areas: data privacy, information security, cybercrime, intellectual property, technology interoperability, legal environment, and free trade and IT infrastructure.
The report shows that Japan, Australia, South Korea ranked the forefront
The assessment showed that Japan, Australia, Germany, the United States and France ranked top five;
BSA President and CEO Robert Harriman that the biggest barrier to global digital services trade is that too many countries are making too many different rules. Harriman that the biggest benefits of cloud computing are scale and globalisation, which require regulations and standards to ensure that cloud data "flow freely across borders". At the same time, Harriman also believes that cloud computing does not require a globally uniform set of regulations, so long as countries ' privacy and security regulations are compatible, they can greatly boost cloud computing and global business growth.
The BSA report points out that cloud computing's rankings are not in direct proportion to economic power, and that China's fourth-lowest ranking is due to weak intellectual property protection and restrictions on sourcing from foreign technology companies. Brazil's penultimate ranking is mainly due to the lack of privacy and security legislation.
Members of the Business Software Alliance include: Microsoft, Adobe, CA, Apple, Sybase and Symantec.
(Responsible editor: Liu Fen)