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Stogit

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Stogit
NameStogit
TypePrivate
IndustryCloud storage
Founded2010
FounderJohn Doe
HeadquartersLondon, United Kingdom
ProductsObject storage, cold storage, archival storage

Stogit Stogit is a cloud-based archival and cold data storage service positioned for long-term retention and compliance. It targets enterprise, scientific, and government customers requiring durable, low-cost storage for infrequently accessed datasets. Stogit's platform competes with established providers and interacts with standards bodies, research institutions, and regulatory frameworks.

Overview

Stogit operates as a provider of large-scale object storage and archival solutions, offering integrations with platforms such as Amazon S3, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, OpenStack, and appliances from Dell EMC and NetApp. Clients include organizations in sectors represented by NASA, European Space Agency, National Institutes of Health, and firms listed on the New York Stock Exchange and London Stock Exchange. Stogit promotes interoperability with formats endorsed by ISO, IETF, and W3C, and participates in working groups at The Linux Foundation and IEEE.

History

Stogit was founded in 2010 amid rapid growth of cloud services driven by companies such as Amazon Web Services, Rackspace, and Dropbox. Early funding rounds involved venture capital firms similar to Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners, and corporate investors akin to Intel Capital. Stogit's milestones included a 2013 product release timed with conferences like AWS re:Invent and OpenStack Summit, a 2016 partnership with storage hardware vendors comparable to Western Digital and Seagate Technology, and regulatory engagements during debates shaped by rulings from the European Court of Justice and policy from the Information Commissioner's Office. Strategic moves aligned with market shifts involving mergers reminiscent of Dell and EMC and competitive responses to pricing pressures from Google Deep Storage initiatives.

Technology and Architecture

Stogit's architecture leverages object storage paradigms akin to systems used by Amazon Glacier and reference implementations from Ceph, MinIO, and OpenStack Swift. Its stack integrates open-source projects curated at The Apache Software Foundation with orchestration from Kubernetes and virtualization via VMware vSphere or KVM. For data durability it uses erasure coding concepts refined in research from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University and applies cryptographic techniques aligned with standards from NIST and protocols from the IETF. Networking relies on backbone carriers such as Level 3 Communications and content delivery methods comparable to Akamai Technologies; hardware nodes use designs influenced by Cisco Systems and Hewlett Packard Enterprise.

Services and Features

Stogit provides tiered storage classes similar to archival tiers introduced by Amazon S3 Glacier and multi-region replication strategies used by Google Cloud Storage. Features include lifecycle management tools interoperable with HashiCorp Terraform and Ansible, policy controls compatible with identity platforms like Okta and Active Directory, and auditing integrations with Splunk and Elasticsearch. For compliance, Stogit supports retention policies and e-discovery workflows used in proceedings under laws like the General Data Protection Regulation and standards referenced by ISO/IEC 27001. Data migration offerings echo services seen from IBM and Google Transfer Appliance while hybrid-cloud connectors mirror partnerships similar to VMware Cloud and Azure Stack.

Governance and Economics

Stogit's corporate governance involves a board structure and investor relationships akin to those at firms like Alphabet Inc. and Meta Platforms. Pricing models reflect per-gigabyte archival tariffs and cold-access fees comparable to Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive and enterprise contracts negotiated by legal teams referencing precedents from Federal Trade Commission settlements and procurement frameworks used by United Nations agencies. Economic considerations tie to capital expenditures on data centers situated in regions served by regulators such as the European Commission and subject to tax treatments discussed in forums like the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Stogit's partnerships and channel strategies resemble alliances between Cisco and systems integrators such as Accenture.

Criticism and Controversies

Stogit has faced scrutiny over pricing transparency and lock-in concerns echoed in debates involving Amazon, Microsoft, and Google cloud customers. Privacy advocates citing rulings from the European Court of Human Rights and campaigns by organizations like Electronic Frontier Foundation have questioned retention and access controls. Technical incidents involving large-scale outages in the industry, similar to historical incidents affecting Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform, prompted discussions in technology communities including GitHub, Stack Overflow, and reports in outlets such as The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. Legal challenges have arisen in contract disputes reminiscent of cases before the High Court of Justice and arbitration panels under International Chamber of Commerce rules.

Category:Cloud storage providers