Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 08 | Page 24

COMMENT E ven if that outlook overestimates cloud spend, it still shows a dramatic shift in mind-set, and it’s often the business, rather than the IT department, that is driving the shift. In today’s digital world, the pull of the cloud and its benefits of flexibility, speed, innovation, cost, and scalability are now too great to be dismissed by the usual fears. To compete today, businesses need to rapidly adopt and deploy new services, to both scale up or down in response to demand and meet the ever-evolving needs and expectations of employees and customers, states Rolf Haas, Enterprise Technology Specialist at Intel Security. Cloud concerns This newfound optimism for the cloud inevitably means more critical and sensitive data is put into cloud services. That means security is going to become a massive issue. Unfortunately, the same survey revealed that the picture isn’t great when it comes to how well organisations are ensuring cloud security today. Some 40% are failing to protect files located on Software- as-a-Service (SaaS) with encryption or data loss prevention tools, 43% do not use encryption or anti-malware in their private cloud servers, and 38% use Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) without encryption or anti-malware. Many organisations have already been at the sharp end of cloud security incidents. Nearly a quarter of respondents (23%) report cloud provider data losses or breaches, and one in five report unauthorised access to their organisations’ data or services in the cloud. The reality check here is that the most commonly cited cloud security incidents were actually around migrating services or data, high costs, and lack of visibility into the provider’s operations. TO COMPETE TODAY, BUSINESSES NEED TO RAPIDLY ADOPT AND DEPLOY NEW SERVICES, TO BOTH SCALE UP OR DOWN IN RESPONSE TO DEMAND AND MEET THE EVER-EVOLVING NEEDS AND EXPECTATIONS OF EMPLOYEES AND CUSTOMERS 24 INTELLIGENTCIO www.intelligentcio.com