For A Better Cloud Security – Wheel it Different, instead of Reinventing the Wheel !

Saas served as sauce? Wow. But only as long as it’s secure. And that’s where the penny drops. No matter. Big money now is way too big on cloud services. We can’t roll back the Age of Participation. The jury may be pondering on how secure is the cloud, but the verdict is only going to tweak “how secure is the cloud” to “how to secure the cloud”.

Yes, there is a cloud over the cloud. Less than a year ago, hackers stole 6 million passwords from dating site eHarmony and LinkedIn fueling the debate over cloud security. DropBox, a free online service provider that lets you share documents freely online, became “a problem child for cloud security” in the words of a cloud services expert.

The “Notorious Nine” threats to cloud computing security according to the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), a not-for-profit body: Data breaches, data loss, account or service traffic hijacking, insecure interfaces and APIs, Denial of service, malicious insiders, cloud abuse, insufficient due diligence, and shared technology vulnerabilities.

However, a problem is an opportunity in disguise, and so the algorithm waiting to be discovered is to how to outsmart the hackers and overcome the threats to cloud security. More so, since the advantages that accrue from cloud services viz. flexibility, scalability, economies of scale, for instance, far outweigh the risks associated with the cloud.

One way for better cloud security is to use a tried, tested and trusted Cloud Service Provider (CSP) rather than to self-design a high availability data center. Also, a CSP yields more economies of scale.
Virtualized servers, though less secure than the physical servers they replace, are getting more and more secure than before. According to research by Gartner, virtual servers were less secure than the physical servers they replaced by 60% in 2012. In 2015, they will be only 30% less secure.

To do the new in cloud security, we could begin by reinventing the old. The traditional methods of data security, viz. Logical security, Physical security and Premises security, also apply to securing the cloud. Logical security protects data using software safeguards such as password access, authentication, and authorization, and ensuring proper allocation of privileges.

The risk in Cloud Service Offerings arises because a single host with multiple virtual machines may be attacked by one of the guest operating systems. Or a guest operating system may be used to attack another guest operating system. Cloud services are accessed from the Internet and so are vulnerable to attacks arising from Denial of Service or widespread infrastructure failure.

Traditional security protocols can also be successfully mapped to work in a cloud environment. For example Traditional physical controls such as firewalls, Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS), Intrusion Prevention Systems (IPS), Network Access Control (NAC) products that ensure access control can continue to be critical components of the security architecture. However, these appliances no longer need to be a physical piece of hardware. A virtual firewall, like for example Cisco’s security gateway, performs the same functions of a physical firewall but has been virtualized to work with the hypervisor. This is catching on fast. Gartner researchers predict that by 2015, 40% of security controls in the data centers will be virtualized.

Moral of the cloud: You don’t have to reinvent the wheel to secure the cloud. But we need to keep talking – to wheel it differently.

Cloud Computing in 2020: More security, directory, identity, privacy, storage, computing

To put it simply, let’s just say More for less.

Caution: Take a deep breath before you proceed. And it’s ok to get scared or excited after a look at these figures.

Year 2020: The digital universe would be run by something like 40 trillion gigabytes of data. That’s what we could be creating, consuming and managing.

Now, figure out the math. Do we have the skills, experience and resources needed to manage all these data all the time through all networks and info-gateways? Nope. The resources we have will get less and lesser, even as they get more and more specialized. This is the scary part of the algorithm facing us.

Let’s cut to the chase and once and for all end the debate on cloud computing. The only way out is to have new, flexible and scalable IT infrastructure that extends beyond the enterprise, viz. cc.

Need any more data points to consider? An estimated 40% of all information in the digital universe will be “touched” by cloud computing in some way or the other, and probably 15% maintained in a cloud.

2020 will see not one cloud, but many clouds, and a migration to converged infrastructures, where servers, storage and networks are integrated together, and installed as a unit of IT infrastructure.

The three tipping points to plug in and play for cloud computing are safety, storage and ease of retrieval.

The corporate is easily convinced, whereas the consumer is a tough nut to crack. But the cloud has gained enough mass and momentum to be the new age choice for both the corporate and the consumer. The new Google Chromebook Pixel, says technology wizard Phaneesh Murthy, is “a truly groundbreaking new device” and “a potential game-changer for cloud-based computing” for both corporate IT as well as in personal computing.

Powered by the cloud, cutting edge and game-changing computing trends are already blowing in the wind. Just like how laptops felled the desktops and smart phones replaced the uni-dimensional traditional mobile phones, light-weight tablets and lean and mean personal computers are leveraging the best of cloud technology to take over the computing world.

Why carry stuff in stuff like pen drives and EHDs when you can access any data from anywhere? That’s the simple idea behind the cloud which is making our life simpler, more fulfilling and engaging.

It may sound funny but it’s hard to resist taking a jab: A little bit of “clouded thinking” can work wonders. It can level the playing field for little David against the Goliath, the giant. A small company, with a little bit of “clouded thinking” can fell Goliath who thinks “traditional”. A big traditional company may take pride in stocking up on computer hardware. But David cuts down on its IT costs, using the cloud by which it pays only for what it wants to use. And before you can understand why what happened, Goliath is history and David is the new big future.

Strip cloud computing off the clutter and the jargon, and what do you have? It’s the new big idea that’s drawing in ooh’s and aah’s from the IT community at the industry box office. Essentially, cloud computing is a pure play on the theme of utility computing, or software as a service (SaaS).

Computing will move to the cloud in newer and bigger ways, and more and more companies, large and small, are betting their new money on the “mainframes in the sky”, if not already.

With the sky opening out to the cloud, the sky is the limit for computing and for consumer experience. Computing is now served up as sauce if you please, over the internet and from vast warehouses of shared machines. Many companies are rapidly moving their applications into the cloud.

Web 2.0 offerings like Facebook, Twitter, Amazon’s raw computing power, Microsoft’s Azure and Google’s App Engine, Salesforce.com, Goople Apps, set the ball rolling for utility computing enabled by the cloud. At Microsoft, millions of customers including top brands like Coca Cola, McDonalds and GlaxoSmithKline, have signed up for using the cloud.

Oracle’s Larry Ellison who once dismissed cloud computing as “water vapour, nonsense, just a computer connected to a network” and “something we have done for more than ten years” must be wondering how he got the Oracle wrong. But big guns don’t always hit the target. Bill Gates was equally dismissive of mobile phones and look what happened.

The rules of engagement have changed. Yesterday software as a service delivered in the form of email, shared photographs, documents, was a beautifully disruptive idea. Today, moving away from “pure software” is the disruptive beast. And we better hurry. For 2020 is just a “few clouds” away…