One of the themes at the 2025 NAB Show in Las Vegas seemed to be a reaction against the cloud; a question about whether we’ve moved too much data to the cloud. Several my interview guests talked about data repatriation, meaning to move cloud data to local storage. I wondered whether this was an isolated example or a trend?
Here’s what I heard during my interviews:
Mike Cavanagh, CEO, Key Code Media: I would say it’s a trend. And really when you look at it and everything, you know, my background is economics, business. If you look and say, we’re going to have 100TB in the cloud, that is effectively $96,000 a year, while you flip that around, you can buy 384 terabyte facilities or SARS for $72,000. So you’re getting more than three x amount of storage at less than one year’s usage cost of using that technology in the cloud.
Sam Bogoch, CEO, Axle AI: Repatriation is not just about privacy. It’s also about cost, because the promise of the cloud was that you would hand all your data over to someone else, and that magically, it would cost less to house and manage and maintain there than it did in your facility. That has not turned out to be the case because there’s a built in markup.
Cloud providers have to essentially buy the same hardware that you would buy, service it and manage it, and then put your stuff on top of it and charge you for it. So it’s the opposite of getting rid of the middleman. You’ve introduced a new middleman, and they’re your cloud vendor.
Tara Montford, Co-founder, EditShare: I gave you example earlier when we spoke about Germany, the certain laws and regulations, they want to know where that media is and, you cannot guarantee on some of the very large cloud providers where that where some of the media is or some of the metadata is the media may be held in a, a cloud center, if you like, that could be in Germany. But the invoice in etc. may come from another center that could be in Virginia. And, that technically does not meet the criteria of the law that they have in their lands.
Phillippe Neron compiled the guide below on how to compare cloud vs. local storage from several sources:
The 7 Key Challenges When Comparing
Cloud Computing and Storage to On-premise Solutions
1. Data Residency and Jurisdiction
2. Lack of Visibility and Control
3. Shared Responsibility Model
4. Complex and Evolving Regulations
5. Data Lifecycle Management
6. Third-Party and Shadow IT Risks
7. Audit and Reporting Challenges
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