Today, many SaaS and PAAs (Platform as a Service) vendors and developer fanatics have adopted cloud computing. In addition, some companies have expressed great interest in their virtualization projects, but have not yet formed a wave of implementation. It's not surprising, actually. Last year, cloud computing was not even in the top 10 list of Gartner's technology. Cohesiveft's CTO, Patrick Kerpan, says:
Security is a barrier to the implementation of enterprise cloud computing.
Despite the fact that there has never been a serious security incident, Infoweek's investigation confirms Patrick's assertion that "service providers cannot protect our data well" is the second biggest reason users are not using SaaS.
This, Patrick explains, is why Cohesiveft to develop the first VPN supply for the cloud. Vpn-cubed is a cryptographic virtual private network that supports three topology architectures:
Enables users to control security on separate clouds, across clouds, multiple clouds, and proprietary infrastructure.
Patrick sees this "user control" feature as part of a [principle] adherence and its multiple governance processes.
One of the main use cases of vpn-cubed may be a resilient and redundant infrastructure:
Patrick has explained this:
VPN implementations are sometimes interrupted for a few minutes, and people only need to deal with these transient failures. But for mission-critical infrastructure, these failures are unacceptable, so we've added redundancy to vpn-cubed to run your entire multi-image topology in the form of a cloud wide area network (wan,wide Are network).
Is security the main obstacle to implementing cloud computing? Does this kind of technology change your mind? You are welcome to present your views and understanding of cloud computing.
The English original: A VPN for Cloud Computing-http://www.infoq.com/news/2008/10/cloud-vpn