Cloud Security Concerns? You’re Not Alone.

September 28, 2016

You hear about the cloud constantly now. For some companies, they use it daily and know what it entails (and the benefits of it). But, for many organizations, it’s still just a buzz word; a trend in computing and data that they’ll wait to adopt until ‘all the kinks are worked out’. But they’re missing out. Our partners at RapidScale have some insights on the source of the fears, and how to address them:

The Disconnect

Cloud computing, at the most basic level, refers to computing resources, like servers or software, offered to businesses via the Internet. When that’s all a business hears though, its team might think: “Well, anyone can access the Internet, so anyone can access my data if it’s in the cloud.”

This is where there’s a disconnect. Just because businesses access their resources through the Web doesn’t mean their data is suddenly available to everyone. In fact, it’s still stored in a data center on physical equipment – this side of it is just managed by a cloud provider rather than the business itself. And guess what? These facilities are equipped with plenty of security measures. Cloud computing infrastructure tends to include sophisticated monitoring systems, multi-layered security safeguards, and central management.

The Fault

Interestingly enough, Gartner predicts that by 2020, 95% of cloud security failures will actually be the customer’s fault, not the cloud provider’s. Think about this: cloud providers have to invest heavily in security if they are going to hold sensitive data on their servers and maintain customers at all. Therefore, today’s cloud services are highly resistant to attack and are actually more secure than traditional in-house setups. There’s really no significant evidence stating that cloud providers are less secure than an organization itself. And while you may reference highly publicized cloud breaches from recent years, these are either part of the minority, or they were due to vulnerabilities that were not the provider’s fault.

For example:

The Target breach that occurred a couple years ago was caused by hackers stealing a third party’s login credentials. This third party had been given access to Target’s network.

A similar Home Depot incident was almost identical, with hackers stealing a vendor’s login to access the network and use malware to sidestep the antivirus software.

And remember the Apple iCloud hack? This one even indirectly occurred when hackers accessed celebrity accounts using brute force and phishing.

Interesting, right?

Think About It This Way…

The main barrier here is that humans hate to let precious data live in a place we can’t see it, but think about it using industry expert David Linthicum’s comparison: “Using the cloud is like putting your money in the bank versus under your mattress. Even though your money, or data, is not on-premises, the bank will do a much better job protecting it because it has vaults and security cameras, more than what a single enterprise company can do.”

That’s exactly it! And if a business feels that it needs to bring on additional protections on its end to feel more confident, that’s a common move. In fact, 75% of enterprises adopt additional security measures beyond what cloud computing providers offer. The top three are data encryption (61%), identity access policies (52%) and regular audits (48%). In this way, organizations are somewhat filling in the blanks and they end up spending less than they would if they implemented it from scratch entirely in-house.
Despite security concerns, 64% of enterprises agree that cloud infrastructure is more secure than older legacy systems. This is great step forward for cloud computing.

If your organization is ready to embrace the cloud, call the network experts at Corporate Technologies Group today. If you’d like to learn more about cloud computing as part of a Unified Communications strategy, read our white paper.

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