Or simply add into legislation that the maximum fine will increase every year by inflation ot 2%, whatever is higher, so that maximum fines keep up
Posts by Yoshi
12 publicly visible posts • joined 14 Jan 2016
FCC fines be damned, ESPN misuses emergency alert tones yet again
UK may not hit goal of 95% mobile coverage, commons committee warns
Fujitsu wins flood contract extension despite starring in TV drama about its failures
Capita scores £239M contract to manage mega public sector pension scheme
Get your cheap memory while growing stockpiles push prices low
UK Prime Minister wants £800M to spend on big British iron
Europe passes sweeping antitrust laws targeting America's Big Tech
Thatcher-era ICL mainframe fingered for failure to pay out over £1bn in UK pensions
Re: Future events for diary.
It's called out in the BBC article and hinted at here, a large part of the problem is that the rules are very complicated. There is many years of tweaks in legislation layering things on and most the original legislation is old in Gov't years. So much so I'm not convinced anyone 100% understands it. The people who might have are either enjoying retirement or demanding handsome contracting terms (I am sure IR35 is having an impact here but that's for a different thread)
In 2006, Amazon debuted EC2. 15 years on, HashiCorp says firms blowing their cloud budgets is all part of the fun
Re: Amazon Cloud Services are like 'Hotel California'
Not complete nonsense unless you're willing to architect for true multi-cloud and therefore only use the services that are common. Then do a lot of the heavy lifting in running apps and services yourself
Do I use the CSPs k8s offering or run my OpenShift? In one scenario I can move freely to other clouds but I'm carrying the effort to run, manage, patch, support OpenShift
For me, I want to make as much of running the service AWS's problem but accept lock in as a consequence