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Stop Paying the Ransom: The Enterprise Guide to Egress Free Migrations

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Manage episode 507849465 series 3660640
内容由David Linthicum提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 David Linthicum 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Regulators are intensifying their scrutiny of cloud pricing, focusing on egress fees and switching friction that keep customers locked in. Across the EU, UK, and US, momentum is building for rules that require portability, interoperability, and fair exit terms. Expect enforceable rights to exit and interoperate as the default.

For enterprises, this is a strategic opening. Cloud economics will shift from "discounts for lock-in" to "freedom to move," altering negotiation leverage, FinOps assumptions, and resilience planning. Now is the time to harden exit rights in contracts, quantify egress exposure, and run switch drills. Architect for portability by default: containerize compute, externalize state, adopt open table formats, and avoid proprietary services where practical. Align governance so legal, procurement, security, and platform engineering share an exit‑readiness playbook and timelines.

Teams that act early will turn compliance into advantage—unlocking multi‑cloud optionality, better pricing, and stronger resilience without last‑minute scrambles. Those that wait may meet new rules with brittle architectures and unfavorable terms. Portability is becoming policy, and strategy should follow.

  continue reading

95集单集

Artwork
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Manage episode 507849465 series 3660640
内容由David Linthicum提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 David Linthicum 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Regulators are intensifying their scrutiny of cloud pricing, focusing on egress fees and switching friction that keep customers locked in. Across the EU, UK, and US, momentum is building for rules that require portability, interoperability, and fair exit terms. Expect enforceable rights to exit and interoperate as the default.

For enterprises, this is a strategic opening. Cloud economics will shift from "discounts for lock-in" to "freedom to move," altering negotiation leverage, FinOps assumptions, and resilience planning. Now is the time to harden exit rights in contracts, quantify egress exposure, and run switch drills. Architect for portability by default: containerize compute, externalize state, adopt open table formats, and avoid proprietary services where practical. Align governance so legal, procurement, security, and platform engineering share an exit‑readiness playbook and timelines.

Teams that act early will turn compliance into advantage—unlocking multi‑cloud optionality, better pricing, and stronger resilience without last‑minute scrambles. Those that wait may meet new rules with brittle architectures and unfavorable terms. Portability is becoming policy, and strategy should follow.

  continue reading

95集单集

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