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Cloud storage is not necessarily new technology, but is more like revamped space. The regular E-mail system can already hold about 10GB of data, but all in E-mail format. Files, documents, and images can now be uploaded directly as they are. With internet access, the files can be accessed, used, and saved over from anywhere. One normally thinks that their ideas are their own, but the internet has bastardized that. Copyrights run rampant on everything on the internet, but why is that a problem. It protects the intellectual rights and design someone has to a work and even a post. The question is where the line is drawn when a work is stored online in a massive database, rather than on a personal device (King, 2009.) It is irrefutable if the data is stored on a thumb drive, that whoever owns the drive owns the data in it. When it comes to cloud storage, the data is on the internet and no one person owns the internet, so who does it fall to? The Intellectual Property (IP) law protects works from being copied and shared without the expressed permission of the creator/author. Audio, text, and even the ideas itself are protected underneath the IP. There are limitations to what a copyright allows, so "Fair Use" from section 107 from the United States Copyright Act of 1976 lets one use the work of others as long a reasonable cause for the use is deemed okay (King, 2009.) In some cases, one can choose to allow for their work to be open to the public and even select groups for use.