Volcanic island wants to host your data

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An offshore data backup company is urging UK and US companies to store their data in Iceland -- a country renowned for its volcanoes.

SecurStore, which hosts the Icelandic arm of Vodafone (Og Vodafone), is attempting to attract customers to what it calls a storage "safe-haven" for firms.

"I guess it's not a good business strategy to put a data centre on the top of a volcano," said Alexander Eiriksson, president of SecurStore. "A lot of people think that Iceland is a volcano with a bit of ice. We're not like that. The volcanoes are hundreds of kilometres away from us. It's very safe."

Iceland lies between the UK and North America on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a tectonic fault line where the North American and the Eurasian plates are separating. The data centres are based around Reykjavik, the capital city of the country.

Cambridge University experts agreed with Eiriksson that the volcanoes pose little risk to SecurStore's business.

"There are volcanoes," said David Pyle, a vulcanologist at Cambridge University. "There have been several eruptions in the last decade. Typically, these eruptions occur very quickly. But the volcanoes that have erupted are relatively remote and there haven’t been any serious eruptions since the 1970s on the peninsula. I'm not aware of there being any serious damage on Iceland."

SecurStore is building its services on the back of storage software company Asigra's technology. The service is intended to allow companies to backup and retrieve data in near-real time speeds.

The company claims that Iceland's optical fibre network could be a cheap option for European businesses.

"There's no terrorist activity here," said Alexander Eiriksson, President of SecurStore. "No one wants to come here -- it's very low risk. We're in a good spot, with cheap power and low-cost fibre running through. We are talking to service providers in Europe and America so they can offer the service to their customers."

SecurStore is also set to offer managed security services.

Talkback

The only reason I knew Reykjavik was the capital of Iceland was because of Rikki Jervasis the Office. I wish I could passively cunjour up more capitals like that.

via Facebook 1 March, 2005 22:02
Reply

Would the author care to define how far away from a volcano constitutes "Safe"?

In a sense, the American Continent is a Volcanic Island too. After all, isn't Mt.St.Helens on there somewhere ? Should New Yorkers worry?

via Facebook 2 March, 2005 11:44
Reply

Iceland hosts many of the oldest written documents in european history. Some of which have survived thousand years of storage. Need I say more?

via Facebook 2 March, 2005 12:50
Reply

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