Computerworld

​Why businesses should focus on 3 areas of Cloud security

CISOs continue to struggle with their cloud strategies and hundreds of apps used across the enterprise.
  • CWNZ Staff (Computerworld New Zealand)
  • 15 June, 2016 22:11

Security professionals continue to face a cloud security problem: Most organisations hesitate to use cloud service providers, however, employees often use hundreds of applications, particularly Software as a Service (SaaS).

“Are you the goldilocks of cloud security?” asked Jay Heiser, research vice president at Gartner, at the Gartner Security & Risk Management Summit.

“Often, no corporate cloud policy or security project feels “just right.” Cloud computing creates a lot of complications for the whole enterprise. From a security and risk management point of view ambiguity is especially difficult to deal with.”

Heiser said one of the main dilemmas with introducing official policies on cloud computing, is that no one can agree what cloud computing actually means.

While Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) view cloud computing as a style of computing, other parts of the enterprise view cloud computing as “things accessed over the internet.”

Three areas of cloud security

Regardless of how groups define cloud computing, it is essential to have a strategy and policies for how to use the cloud. Enterprises should focus on the three primary areas of cloud security concern.

Multi-tenancy

Multi-tenancy, where enterprises share space with other customers, provides limited flexibility in services, With data out of the physical control of the enterprise, security becomes a concern. In fact, 38 percent of companies who don’t plan to use the public cloud cited security and privacy as the main reason.

However, companies may be using security/privacy as a scapegoat for fears about relinquishing control over data and a major shift in the status quo of how enterprises are used to operating.

“There’s been no correlation between security failure and the degree of multitenancy,” Heiser added. Heiser noted that sometimes hybrid is a way that some organisations can become more confident in how to explore using the public cloud model.

Virtualisation

For Heiser, virtualisation requires different vulnerability management and patching processes for the cloud environment. Organisations will use different tools to manage virtual machines.

Plus, its complex, dynamic, and distributed nature means that there is no physical indication for safety such as the traditional “blinking lights.”

SaaS

SaaS applications offer an increasing level of security and control functionality. However, they are mostly under the control of end users, offer minimal transparency, and offer no customisation. To add to the complexity, many enterprises often have at least 200 and up to 1,000 SaaS applications in use.

Pick your SaaS battles

At the end of the day, CISOs need to pick their battles and decide where time and resources are best spent when dealing with the risk context of this SaaS-scape. With this is mind, divide SaaS apps into three tiers.

Tier 1: Realistically, 80 percent of the market is in 100 cloud services. These are proven options, and though not without some risk, organisations should dwell on whether they are secure, but use them securely, said Heiser.

Tier 2: These companies, typically large brand names that are experimenting with cloud services, haven’t provided them as their main business for more than five years.

Often vertically-oriented strategic apps, they lack third party evaluation - this is where CISOs should focus company resources and evaluation.

Tier 3: With over thousands of tier 3 cloud computing apps, these are practically noise, said Heiser. Don’t assume a tiny cloud service provider (CSP) is secure, or financially solvent. This may be an acceptable risk, but use Tier 3 CSPs carefully.