Personal cloud applications can be defined as public cloud services that focus on individual or personal use as opposed to business use. "The public cloud is used by the general public cloud consumers and the cloud service provider has the full ownership of the public cloud with its own policy, value, and profit, costing, and charging model" (Singh et al., 2011). Consumers are using personal cloud applications for shared calendars, shopping lists, social networking, and location-based services. With respect to personal cloud applications, our model views individuals as consumers who, from a vast number of alternatives, consolidate a coherent solution that suits their individual purposes. What emerges is the following: (i) cloud users carry around with them a suite of applications ideally suited for their purposes; and (ii) because selection and usage is easily tracked by marketers and developers, this behavior drives new offerings toward increasingly more pertinent functionality. Increasingly irrelevant are the issues of architecture and operating system. For an application to be appropriately labeled "for the cloud" it must operate anywhere (provided there is connectivity to the cloud) and on virtually anything.Some of the advantages of using personal cloud applications include ease of collaboration, synchronization of multiple devices, and automated backup of data. In addition to simply sharing information, some cloud applications allow for simultaneous entry and updating of data while keeping track of the specific user and facilitating version control. Since some users may now use desktops at work, laptops and tablets at home, and smartphones on the go, the almost effortless synchronization of information on the various devices is a desired feature. Whether one is using multiple devices or a single device for access, automated backup means that no longer will a hard-drive crash or some physical damage to a device mean that data will be lost or