A simpler name would require a trademark. Go on, try to trademark a nice name. Or better yet - hundreds of them each year.
Randomly looking numbers and characters cannot be trademarked (one of the good examples was Intel's move from x86 naming to Celeron and Pentium as they couldn't prevent others calling their CPUs 486), so everyone can use them freely.
Garmin is being eaten alive by Apple and Samsung, it's their last grasp for some air. They refused to change their business model for a decade and it's a payback time.
Will they actually work? UK has the second most cameras after China, but pretty much none of them work or are accessible by police, so they do fuck all.
Cloud costs are super low. That's why clouds are so cheap - every penny is optimised, because it eats into profits. P2P is extremely expensive and resource intensive.
Torrents are not doing fine, torrents are a really good example of huge resource waste, latency and stability issues. And, contrary to your opinion, it's better to make YouTube P2P than gov services. Because YouTube is not sensitive to latency and doesn't require stability or security.
Your idea that gov services should not be instant is just bonkers.
In any case, P2P is useless, insecure, slow and power hungry. And, once again, it shouldn't be used for anything but back ups.
People in London just walk in front of all cars all the time. Including me. That's not an unpredictable behaviour, that's a default and very predictable behaviour. If you're in a car - you stop.
P2P has insane latency and is not applicable to most industries. It's a decent idea for back ups though. P2P also has insane energy costs. It's not as bad as BitCoins, but it will destroy our planet for sure.
A simpler name would require a trademark. Go on, try to trademark a nice name. Or better yet - hundreds of them each year.
Randomly looking numbers and characters cannot be trademarked (one of the good examples was Intel's move from x86 naming to Celeron and Pentium as they couldn't prevent others calling their CPUs 486), so everyone can use them freely.