Cloud Security Still a Struggle for Many Companies

| October 1, 2010 | Comments (1)

You want to embrace cloud computing because it makes your IT operations leaner and less expensive. But your understanding of cloud security hasn’t advanced much in the last year, so you have to be cautious.

Security Firm: Apple Has More Security Holes Than Microsoft
That’s one of the takeaways from the Eighth Annual Global Information Security Survey CSO conducted along with sister publication CIO and PriceWaterhouseCoopers. Some 12,847 business and technology executives from around the world took the survey, and many admitted they’re still a bit scared with the idea of putting critical data in the cloud.

Sixty-two percent of you have little to no confidence in your ability to secure any assets that you put in the cloud. Even among the 49 percent of respondents who have ventured into cloud computing, more than a third (39 percent) have major qualms about security.

Asked what they think is the greatest risk to their cloud computing strategy, respondents said they were uncertain about their ability to enforce security policies at a provider site, and were concerned about inadequate training and IT auditing. James Pu, information security officer for the Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association (Lacera), is among the skeptics. He says he loves the flexibility and agility cloud computing could provide, but he’s just not convinced that today’s cloud technology is ready for prime time.

“As good as it is today, you don’t have the same reliability as you have with a local-area network,” says Pu, who does double duty as Lacera’s CIO. “I also worry about the third parties involved.” Cloud vendors, he notes, use third parties to host data centers and hardware. And those hosts may hire people without doing necessary background screening. “When data goes into the cloud,” Pu says, “all it takes is a software bug to accidentally reveal my data.”

Before cloud computing can become universally accepted as a secure option, a few things have to happen, says Ken Pfeil, CSO for a large mutual fund company in the Boston area and formerly CSO for financial companies Capital IQ and Miradiant.

First, he says, security experts must come up with more specific guidelines for which kinds of data it is acceptable to store in the cloud, be it customer information or intellectual property. He also wants clarification from regulatory agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission as to how financial reporting controls should work in the cloud.

Read More..

Here are some related posts:






Tags: , , , ,

Category: Resources, Security, Strategy

About Onuora Amobi: Onuora Amobi is the founder and CEO of Nnigma, a leading online marketing firm headquartered in Pasadena, California. A Microsoft MVP with close to two decades of IT experience, he is also the co-author of the Windows 7 Deployment Guide for small businesses and IT Professionals(http://www.windows7deploymentguide.com). View author profile.

  • http://bit.ly/9o7Xd0 Jeremy Hodge

    There’s been a lot of talk around cloud security lately, and it’s something that should not be taken lightly when adopting and implementing a cloud solution.

    There are a few IBM resources covering the issue of security, including recommendations for the implementation of cloud security. http://bit.ly/dbYI9w Topics such as enforcing security policies at a provider site are discussed:

    “The cloud’s infrastructure, including servers, routers, storage devices, power supplies, and
    other components that support operations, should be physically secure. Safeguards include
    the adequate control and monitoring of physical access using biometric access control
    measures and closed circuit television (CCTV) monitoring. Providers need to clearly explain
    how physical access is managed to the servers that host client workloads and that support
    client data.”

    Also…

    IBM Point of View: Security and Cloud Computing
    http://bit.ly/9XbSQp

    If you have any questions you can reach me on Twitter @jhodge88