Files will be securely saved and easily accessed on Seagate’s always-on storage as a service.
Seagate Technology Holdings plc, a world leader in mass-data storage infrastructure solutions, reached an agreement with Zoom that will soon enable the video conferencing company’s customers to use Seagate Lyve™ Cloud to store meeting recordings.
Recommended ITech News: Cyware Announces CTIX Spoke – an Exclusive Threat Intelligence Processing and Collaboration Platform for ISAC/ISAO Members
“Given the scale of meetings we enable and the variety of customer needs, we need cloud storage that delivers best-in-class TCO. We are adding Lyve Cloud support because it delivers those benefits.”
When Zoom’s customers record their meetings, they will have the option to save these media files on Seagate’s S3 storage-as-a-service (STaaS) platform.
Seagate’s always-on edge-to-cloud mass-storage Lyve Cloud is designed to overcome common storage challenges—unpredictable costs and complexity of storing, moving, and activating data at scale.
Recommended ITech News: CareRev Transforms Customer Experience and C**** Business Communications Efficiency With Dialpad Cloud Solutions
“Our customers expect secure storage and frictionless sharing of their meeting recordings,” said Velchamy Sankarlingham, president of product and engineering for Zoom. “Given the scale of meetings we enable and the variety of customer needs, we need cloud storage that delivers best-in-class TCO. We are adding Lyve Cloud support because it delivers those benefits.”
“We made cloud economics simple and predictable regardless of the high volume of meetings recorded or the number of times viewed,” said Seagate’s Ravi Naik, executive vice president of storage services and chief information officer. “Lyve Cloud charges no API fees and egress fees, and our always-on storage means Zoom users can view their recordings when they need to.”
The multiyear deal between Seagate and Zoom is for a Silicon Valley cloud location, with other options on the horizon.
Recommended ITech News: NS1 Integration with Datadog Bolsters Visibility at the Distributed Edge