April 14, 2015 By Ivan Ivanov 2 min read

The benefits of cloud computing are clear. But in terms of cloud security, moving to the cloud means sharing massive amounts of IT resources among many users and security processes. The negative implications of this are often hidden beneath layers of abstraction. In fact, the flexibility and openness of the cloud computing model has created a number of security concerns about the privacy, integrity and availability of data. These concerns often make companies anxious about moving to the cloud.

Can you trust the cloud? Does the fact that moving to the cloud means shifting much of the responsibility and control of your data and operations from the client organization to a cloud provider present a roadblock to adopting the cloud? The following is a closer look at some of the legitimate risks and concerns:

Where Does Your Data Reside?

Company information is probably the most valuable asset in every organization, and protecting data confidentiality and integrity is the most fundamental directive of information security. This core principle is even more essential when a company’s sensitive information resides offshore and when the data moves further from the client’s control. Many organizations aren’t exactly sure where and in what way their data is stored, including who has access to it. Typical concerns arise in relation to how the data is allocated, archived and distributed. On the other hand, regulatory compliance has become more and more restrictive. For example, certain regulatory requirements in the European Union expressly forbid limited control capability over sensitive data, especially when it is unknown whether the data might have been sent outside EU borders.

What Are the Cloud Security Implications of a Shared Environment?

Essentially, the cloud represents a shared environment for co-hosting many tenants’ information assets and data. For cloud security, this implies a company’s data shares the same infrastructure and information resources of the cloud environment together with all other tenants (clients). Such a setup certainly makes you wonder whether your data is properly segregated and protected from unauthorized access. Theoretically, misconfigured virtual domains or poorly defined policy-based security zones can mean potential data leakage or intrusions between tenants. This could lead to distributed denial-of-service attacks and massive sensitive data compromise and loss.

If You Move Your Data to the Cloud, Are You Off the Hook If a Security Breach Occurs?

Another attractive aspect of moving to the cloud is that it can offer a highly automated, highly standardized, flexible and optimized IT environment. Because of this, you might assume security breaches are less likely. Moreover, you probably trust your cloud supplier to secure your data. Just keep in mind that your data still remains defenseless against an internal security breach. You have not shifted the ownership and accountability of a potential security breach, just its location.

The bottom line is that the cloud is a disruptive technology, just like the Internet once was, and some people are scared of disruptive technologies. Of course, there are some legitimate cloud security concerns, but policies should not be written based on fear. The risks must be analyzed so you can find the proper controls and countermeasures.

Follow me on Twitter at @Ivtivanov.

More from Cloud Security

Autonomous security for cloud in AWS: Harnessing the power of AI for a secure future

3 min read - As the digital world evolves, businesses increasingly rely on cloud solutions to store data, run operations and manage applications. However, with this growth comes the challenge of ensuring that cloud environments remain secure and compliant with ever-changing regulations. This is where the idea of autonomous security for cloud (ASC) comes into play.Security and compliance aren't just technical buzzwords; they are crucial for businesses of all sizes. With data breaches and cyber threats on the rise, having systems that ensure your…

Risk, reward and reality: Has enterprise perception of the public cloud changed?

4 min read - Public clouds now form the bulk of enterprise IT environments. According to 2024 Statista data, 73% of enterprises use a hybrid cloud model, 14% use multiple public clouds and 10% use a single public cloud solution. Multiple and single private clouds make up the remaining 3%.With enterprises historically reticent to adopt public clouds, adoption data seems to indicate a shift in perception. Perhaps enterprise efforts have finally moved away from reducing risk to prioritizing the potential rewards of public cloud…

AI-driven compliance: The key to cloud security

3 min read - The growth of cloud computing continues unabated, but it has also created security challenges. The acceleration of cloud adoption has created greater complexity, with limited cloud technical expertise available in the market, an explosion in connected and Internet of Things (IoT) devices and a growing need for multi-cloud environments. When organizations migrate to the cloud, there is a likelihood of data security problems given that many applications are not secure by design. When these applications migrate to cloud-native systems, mistakes in configuration…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today