- If I were in charge of the defence department of a government, there’s no way I’d ever allow closed source software to even touch machines with sensitive data. Or even pre-compiled software. Because the problem is not what you see, like personnel; it’s what you don’t, like bribery and backdoors. - Let alone use “cloud” computing. Come on… it’s someone else’s computer. - Bribery and backdoors? Which government are we talking about here? Those are features. - It’s a feature when you use it, but a bug when your competitors do it. 
 
- Cloud computing I agree, at least until we figure out homomorphic encryption. - For cloud storage it’s not as bad, as long as you control the keys and the provider doesn’t see them then you can be fairly confident the data is safe. - Even then, for cloud storage; cryptography is an additional layer of protection, but all this data should be kept offline as much as reasonably possible. 
 
 
- How about China agents? They already have russia ones… 






