A beta test is usually a shakedown, intended to remove any lingering bugs, but for Cloud28+ it was more of a shake-up.
The Cloud28+ catalog offers European businesses around 700 infrastructure-, platform- and software-as-a-service offerings from almost 150 partners. It allows them to choose services based on price, performance, and the location where the data is hosted, among other criteria.
Barely a week after the beta test began, the first shock came, as data sovereignty and hosting location unexpectedly took on new importance for many European cloud services businesses. The European Union's top court, asked to clarify a point of law in a case concerning Facebook in Ireland, struck down the Safe Harbor Agreement that had previously allowed businesses to export EU citizens' personal data -- that of their customers or employees, for instance -- to the U.S. for processing. Those that weren't scrambling to make new arrangements were left wondering whether they complied with EU data protection law, which requires that personal data be afforded the same level of privacy protection wherever it is processed.
The second shock for Cloud28+ came two weeks later, when its main backer, Hewlett-Packard, said it will pull out of the public cloud business come January 31, although the company pledged ongoing support for its Helion OpenStack distribution and to continue managing hybrid cloud services for its customers.
Hewlett-Packard was in the process of splitting itself into the new HP, focusing on printers and PCs, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE). Their separation became official on Nov. 1, but it was another month before HPE anointed its new preferred cloud provider, Microsoft Azure.
Now the Cloud28+ team are putting all that behind them: The catalog is now open for business, HPE's senior marketing manager for Cloud28+, Guillaume Runser, wrote on Thursday.
The catalog, at cloudofclouds.eu, lets users search for and compare cloud services, although if they want to buy, they'll be redirected to service providers' own sites to sign up. There are other sites cataloging services hosted in Europe, such as endofsafeharbor.eu, but it doesn't offer the same search tools.
While the main backer of Cloud28+, HPE, is throwing in its lot with Microsoft for hosting, that hasn't stopped other hosting providers from joining.
A last-minute arrival before the launch was ZettaBox, which itself only opened for business in June, aiming to profit from restrictions in some European countries on where data can be hosted. The tearing up of the Safe Harbor Agreement came as a bonus.
"Cloud28+ was a logical community for Zettabox to join as their mission is to build a cohesive and collaborative cloud environment, for Europeans by Europeans," said James Kinsella, founder and CEO of Zettabox.
Concern about data sovereignty is unlikely to be just a passing fad: The European Commission hopes to have a new Safe Harbor Agreement in place early in the new year, but there are concerns that the court that struck down the previous one may not have said its last word in the matter.