Recently, the Heartbleed of this security loophole in the heart bleeds frequently in the eyes of internet users, and heart bleeds "will continue to threaten Internet security for many years, and its vestiges may remain forever." This security loophole again to the Internet security sounded the alarm. This has brought us back to a cliché: is cloud computing really safe?
There is no doubt that the NSA, WikiLeaks, cybercrime and hackers are all trying to get your data and use your data. The existing technology has not really been absolutely safe, and most of the user data still have exposure risk. Although businesses and government departments are trying to improve cloud security and strengthen data protection measures, problems still occur. Let's look at the security risks of cloud computing.
Data center
Recently, understand that SMEs should be in the cloud for accounting work. While we've found a bunch of good reasons, the nature of cloud computing requires someone else to look after your information and be in an offline datacenter.
So the host administrator has complete control over your information. They need to be responsible for all updates and have access to your data. More importantly, they cannot protect your data as rigorously and vigorously as you do with your local data center. Must be carefully chosen for the managed service.
Legal liability
As hackers and cybercrime become more and more rampant, we look at the occurrence of data disclosure incidents more and more frequently. These leaks tend to lead to massive data loss, and in a world of perfect laws and regulations, the loss of data can lead to lawsuits and extended court cases.
The company is directly responsible for the unsound or lack of privacy protection.
While the implementation of these measures is undoubtedly expensive, the court's protracted battle is more expensive. So the company's own safety and security is essential.
Internal threats
Although small and medium-sized enterprises have fewer problems, the threat from internal staff to steal corporate data is indeed a danger to large enterprises. Some of the recent security vulnerabilities have been caused by internal negligence, including Vodafone's violation of 2 million of clients ' bank data, and now notorious for the theft of data by the NSA.
In all two cases, individuals stole the data and were granted access by privileged users. Once an enterprise employee gets access to the company cloud, everything can be extracted from customer data to confidential information and intellectual property.
The threat is not over. Small businesses that do not have adequate security measures, and because of the resentment of former employees, the entire organization's cloud data are likely to be deleted-a move that would have disastrous consequences for corporate customers and reputations.