The manifesto, which is supported by IBM and others, is intended as “a call to action for the worldwide cloud community”, and aims to set out certain principles and guidelines for interoperability within the cloud.
But in a statement, Amazon reportedly said that although it believes standards will continue to evolve, “the best way to illustrate openness and customer flexibility is by what you actually provide and deliver for them”.
“Over the past 3 years, we’ve made AWS available via multiple platforms, multiple programming languages and multiple operating systems – because that’s what customers have told us matters the most to them,” the statement continued.
“We’ll continue to pursue an approach of providing customers with maximum flexibility as the standards discussion unfolds.”
Earlier this week, Microsoft manifesto. In a blog posting, Steven Martin, senior director of developer platform management at the firm, said he was disappointed in the lack of openness so far.
"It appears to us that one company, or just a few companies, would prefer to control the evolution of cloud computing, as opposed to reaching a consensus across key stakeholders [including cloud users] through an 'open' process,” he said.
The Open Cloud Manifesto is available to read online now, “for CIOs, governments, IT users and business leaders who intend to use cloud computing and to establish a set of core principles for cloud providers”.
