
<p>Brandon Robinson, director of network services at energy trading company Aces, an EMC shop, at the VMworld conference in San Francisco.</p><p>Explosive revelations in the past six months about the U.S. government's massive cyber-spying activities have spooked individuals, rankled politicians and enraged privacy watchdogs, but top IT executives aren't panicking -- yet.</p><p>So far, they are monitoring the issue, getting informed and taking steps to mitigate their risk in various ways. But the alarming reports haven't prompted them to roll back their decisions to host applications and data in the cloud.</p><p>That's the consensus from about 20 high-ranking IT executives interviewed in North America and Europe about the effect that the U.S. National Security Agency's snooping practices have had on their cloud computing strategy. The news broke in June, after former NSA contractor Edward Snowden began leaking the earth-shaking secrets to the media.</p><p><a href="http://www.techworld.com.au/article/533623/why_cios_stick_cloud_computing_despite_nsa_snooping_scandal/?fp=16&fpid=1">Keep reading...</a></p>