While trust in the cloud is rising, IT departments find it hard to keep the cloud safe, according to Intel Security’s second annual cloud security report, “Building Trust in a Cloudy Sky.”
The report outlines the current state of cloud adoption, the primary concerns with private and public cloud services, security implications, and the evolving impact of Shadow IT of the more than 2,000 IT professionals surveyed.
The report reveals that trust now outnumbers distrust for public clouds by more than 2-to-1. In fact, today, 62% store sensitive customer information in the public cloud.
However, close to half (49 percent) of professionals slowed cloud adoption due to a lack of cybersecurity skills. More than half (65 percent) think Shadow IT is interfering with keeping the cloud safe and secure, and 52 percent indicate a malware infection can be tracked to a cloud application.
Many organizations in Southeast Asia have incorporated a ‘Cloud First’ strategy into their architectures,” said David Allott, Director of Cyber Defense, APAC, Intel Security. “Those who have yet to do so, are rapidly striving towards cloud adoption. We saw that in 2016, 57 percent of organizations shifted to hybrid cloud models, compared to just 24 percent in 2015. This is an indication of the ever growing state of cloud adoption among organizations.”
Trust in the Cloud on the Rise
The trust and perception of public cloud services continues to improve year over year. Most organizations view cloud services as or more secure than private clouds, and more likely to deliver lower costs of ownership and overall data visibility. Those who trust public clouds now outnumber those who distrust public clouds by more than 2-to-1. Improved trust and perception, as well as increased understanding of the risks by senior management, is encouraging more organizations to store sensitive data in the public cloud. Personal customer information is the most likely type of data to be stored in public clouds, kept there by 62 percent of those surveyed.
Risks Also Rise: Shadow IT and the Cybersecurity Skill Shortage
The ongoing shortage of security skills is continuing to affect cloud deployments. Almost half of the organizations surveyed report the lack of cybersecurity skills has slowed adoption or usage of cloud services, possibly contributing to the increase in Shadow IT activities. Another 36 percent report they are experiencing a scarcity but are continuing with their cloud activities regardless. Only 15 percent of those surveyed state they do not have a skills shortage.
Due to the ease of procurement, almost 40 percent of cloud services are now commissioned without the involvement of IT, and unfortunately, visibility of these Shadow IT services has dropped from about 50 percent last year to just under 47 percent this year. As a result, 65 percent of IT professionals think this phenomenon is interfering with their ability to keep the cloud safe and secure. This is not surprising given the amount of sensitive data now being stored in the public cloud and more than half (52 percent) of respondents reporting they have definitively tracked malware from a cloud SaaS application.
Data Center Progression
The number of organizations using private cloud only has dropped from 51 percent to 24 percent over the past year, while hybrid cloud use has increased from 19 percent to 57 percent. This move to a hybrid private/public cloud architecture requires the data center to evolve to a highly virtualized, cloud-based infrastructure. On average, 52 percent of an organization’s data center servers are virtualized, 80 percent are using containers and most expect to have the conversion to a fully software-defined data center completed within two years.
Recommendations
To help companies deal with cyber attacks, the report offers the following recommendations:
- Attackers will look for the easiest targets, regardless of whether they are public, private or hybrid. Integrated or unified security solutions that provide visibility across all of the organization’s services could be the best defense.
- User credentials, especially for administrators, will be the most likely form of attack. Organizations need to ensure they are using authentication best practices, such as distinct passwords, multi-factor authentication and even biometrics where available.
- Security technologies such as data loss prevention, encryption and cloud access security brokers (CASBs) remain underutilized. Integrating these tools with an existing security system increases visibility, enables discovery of shadow services, and provides options for automatic protection of sensitive data at rest and in motion throughout any type of environment.
- Organizations need to evolve toward a risk management and mitigation approach to information security. They should consider adopting a Cloud First strategy to encourage adoption of cloud services to reduce costs and increase flexibility, and put security operations in a proactive position instead of a reactive one.