Companies and consumers alike love “the cloud”.
But the same security mistakes appear to be helping hackers steal data from cloud-based systems time and time again.
And it’s against that gloomy backdrop that a new report by the Cloud Security Alliance, “Identity Solutions: Security Beyond the Perimeter”, makes a worthwhile read.
According to surveys detailed in the Centrify-sponsored report, 22% of respondents whose companies had suffered a data breach said that compromised credentials were to blame.
In addition, 65% of respondents indicated that the likelihood their company would experience a future breach due to compromised credentials was medium to high.
It’s understandable why home users and businesses love the cloud so much.
Internet-based services bring many benefits, such as automatic updates, the convenience to work from anywhere with an internet connection, increased collaboration and no need to be in the same place as the computer storing your data.
Of course, there are potential pitfalls with cloud-based services too – for instance, can you trust that your provider is taking security seriously?
But it’s not just that you’re placing your trust in a third-party to be acting securely to protect your data’s confidentiality and integrity. The very fact that you are putting your data on the internet, accessible from anywhere in the world, means that potentially there are greater opportunities for hackers to break in.
After all, if the server carrying your sensitive information was on your local network – rather than attached to the public internet – hackers will have a less clear route to your data.
Furthermore, rogue staff inside your organisation could also take advantage of the fact that the data is on an internet server, rather than a more tightly-controlled internal computer, to steal information.
So, if you are going to put your data in the cloud (or on “someone else’s computer” as I prefer to call it) you would be wise to recognize this, and take appropriate steps to protect it:
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Graham Cluley is an award-winning security blogger, researcher and public speaker. He has been working in the computer security industry since the early 1990s.
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