Ellison Threatens Cloud More As Friend Than FoeEllison Threatens Cloud More As Friend Than Foe

Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, long a vocal critic, now supports cloud computing, sort of, unless what you're doing falls outside his "definition."

Charles Babcock, Editor at Large, Cloud

October 7, 2010

2 Min Read
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Ellison seizes on this distinction as a differentiating factor. Salesforce.com CRM applications are not run in virtual machines, while Oracle Exalogic applications are. Ellison implied the lack of isolation in a virtual machine contributes to their lack of security. He said it can lead to a mixing of data on the same physical server. He charged that Salesforce's multitenant applications "co-mingle" their users' data and anything could happen with its "weak security model." At this point, it's clear Ellison has been reading the opinion surveys and knows that security is the top concern of IT managers, when it comes to cloud computing. But he can't define the "virtualized" EC2 setting as a strong form of cloud computing and Salesforce.com as a weak one. On the contrary, both Salesforce.com and EC2 are doing something similar: they've built powerful data centers, automatically accessible on the Internet, that offer computing power to end users based on a new distribution model.

With EC2, the end user sends his application to an Amazon data center and orders it to run. With Salesforce, a shared application is already in the data center, and the end user orders an individualized version of it to run. Both of these are strong cloud computing examples and both are much lower cost than their predecessor forms of computing, the packaged applications that Oracle now offers by the hundredweight.

In fact, in a future discussion, I want to describe the multitenant application as one of the engineering accomplishments of our age -- a cornerstone of cloud computing. Its efficiencies surpass those of its predecessor forms of applications and it is the most likely candidate to replace that packaged application in your data center somewhere down the road. Ellison's about face at Oracle OpenWorld was a rare Silicon Valley event where a vehement critic had to eat his words and accept a trend he had been trashing. Too many members of his audience had come to accept the cloud for Ellison to continue in that vein.

But his halting "definition" had less to do with how to deliver the most efficient computing power to end users than with where he thinks the next round of competition is coming from. Looking for an opening, he attacked the cloud's multitenant application -- or at least Salesforce's version of it -- as unsound and unsafe. Ellison as a friend of the cloud is almost more dangerous than he was as a critic. The marketplace is changing, orange is the new pink, and the leopard has changed his tune -- but he hasn't changed his spots.

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About the Author

Charles Babcock

Editor at Large, Cloud

Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for information and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.

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