|
|
|
|
|
by fangorn
990 days ago
|
|
When cloud was a young buzzword there was a popular test: replace "in the cloud" with "on the internet" and see if you want to continue. - We store pictures of our kids [in the cloud|on the internet]. - We store all our proprietary code [in the cloud|on the internet]. - We store all our secrets [in the cloud|on the internet]. - We store all the sensitive customer information that we could be fined millions for losing [in the cloud|on the internet]. It still is a good test, but I guess this ship has sailed... |
|
I think this argument is only valid if you would use cloud services without private networking set up. The #1 skill a company needs if it wants to leverage the cloud is network engineering/security. There are things like Azure ExpressRoute and AWS DirectConnect that give you private access to the cloud providers own backbone network infrastructure to avoid sending traffic over the public internet. And if you are worried about securing the data at rest, you have everything available to encrypt and protect it. In my experience the problem is not that "the cloud" is insecure but companies trying to avoid the extra mile to properly set up their infrastructure for the sake of saving money and efforts. Sure, the hardware is not owned by you. But why should it be? Running this stuff at hyperscale is the more efficient and ultimately secure and reliable way.