Findings from 2017’s Intel Cloud Security Report

The Intel Cloud Security Report of 2017 has brought out some interesting revelations about the cloud industry, and the likely attitudes and expectations this year. Titled Building Trust in a Cloudy Sky, this report features responses from more than 2,000 IT professionals to know about their insights into the current happenings of the cloud industry, and the possible challenges they believe would hamper its growth in the near future.

Out of these 2000 professionals, about 45.6 percent opined that the rate of cloud adoption has slowed down because of the non-availability of cloud “specialists.” In other words, the gap in cloud skills is impeding the adoption of cloud within their respective organizations, thereby casting a shadow in IT deployments. Surprisingly, 15 percent of the respondents opined that lack of security skills has not affected their organization at all, and in fact, no such problem even exists.

Another significant take away from this report is the role of IT department in cloud deployments. As much as 40 percent of cloud services used by organizations are deployed without the knowledge of their IT department. This finding opens up a multitude of problems. Firstly, lack of transparency can lead to  a disjointed security environment that can put the entire organization at risk. Secondly, such a disjointed environment means more work for the security department as they have to identify loopholes and address them, after they occur.

Thirdly, when an organization doesn’t have a comprehensive or a company-wide policy, it creates a lot of chaos. Such a scenario can encourage different departments to commission their own services and deployments, which could be a nightmare for any organization.

Due to the above problems, it’s best to involve the IT department in any deployment. Even if they’re not actively involved in every stage of deployment, they should at the minimum have sufficient visibility to ensure that all applications and data are safe and secure.

The Intel Cloud Security Report also highlights some positive developments for the cloud industry. For example, the number of respondents who distrust public cloud services has fallen from 50 percent to 29 percent over the last year. In addition, 85 percent of the respondents said they store some or all of their critical applications and data in the cloud.

This is a heartening development, and goes to show how much cloud security has advanced over the last year. These advancements have softened people’s attitude towards public cloud, and in turn, this is expected to increase the rate of cloud adoption.

When the respondents were questioned about their use of PaaS, SaaS and IaaS, their responses showed that an overwhelming majority preferred a hybrid cloud model to store their data. Also, 57 percent of organizations have been involved in some form of hybrid cloud deployment, up from the 19 percent of last year.

Predictably, the number of organizations using private cloud has fallen from 50 percent last year to 25 percent this year.

All this means, we can expect more cloud adoption this year. In fact, we can expect more hybrid cloud and public cloud deployments as organizations feel more confident about cloud security.

The post Findings from 2017’s Intel Cloud Security Report appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

[session] #IIoT Network and #EdgeComputing | @ThingsExpo @Midokura #IoT

There are 66 million network cameras capturing terabytes of data. How did factories in Japan improve physical security at the facilities and improve employee productivity? Edge Computing reduces possible kilobytes of data collected per second to only a few kilobytes of data transmitted to the public cloud every day. Data is aggregated and analyzed close to sensors so only intelligent results need to be transmitted to the cloud. Non-essential data is recycled to optimize storage.

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[session] @Scrumdotorg to Present at @DevOpsSummit | #Scrum #AI #DevOps

It is ironic, but perhaps not unexpected, that many organizations who want the benefits of using an Agile approach to deliver software use a waterfall approach to adopting Agile practices: they form plans, they set milestones, and they measure progress by how many teams they have engaged. Old habits die hard, but like most waterfall software projects, most waterfall-style Agile adoption efforts fail to produce the results desired. The problem is that to get the results they want, they have to change their culture and cultures are very hard to change. To paraphrase Peter Drucker, “culture eats Agile for breakfast.” Successful approaches are opportunistic and leverage the power of self-organization to achieve lasting change. This talk will share stories of success and failure and will talk about why different approaches succeed and fail.

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UK businesses remain ‘risk-averse’ and lagging behind in cloud strategy, Intel argues

(c)iStock.com/john shepherd

Organisations in the UK are among the least likely globally to have a cloud-first strategy, according to a new report from Intel Security.

The study, which polled more than 2,000 senior IT professionals, found the UK had pretty miserable scores across the board compared to their international brethren. The UK’s score of 70% for businesses who are cloud-first – whilst still a reasonable number – lagged behind the global average of more than 80%, while only 7% of UK firms said they stored all of their data in the public cloud, compared with 25% on average globally.

Similarly, the UK lags behind when it comes to having a DevSecOps – development, security, and operations – function in the business, with 28% compared to the 44% global average. As a result, shadow IT practices are likely to be more prevalent; almost three quarters (74%) of UK respondents said their organisation had public cloud services in use which were commissioned outside of the IT department, above the global average of 66%.

“Despite the majority belief that shadow IT is putting the organisation at risk, security technologies such as data loss prevention, encryption, and cloud access security brokers remain underutilised,” Intel noted in an executive summary. “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.”

One of the primary reasons for UK firms being tentative is that old favourite, the skills gap. Almost a quarter (24%) of respondents said that having skilled staff who understand cloud architecture will boost adoption rates. This rings true with similar research from Robert Half Technology earlier this month, which found that three quarters of UK-based CIOs and IT directors regularly encounter IT professionals who they believe are not up to the task.

In terms of global statistics, hybrid cloud usage increased from 19% to 57% of respondents year on year, while organisations using only private cloud dropped from 51% to 24%.

You can read the full report here (registration required).

UK businesses remain ‘risk-averse’ and lagging behind in cloud strategy, Intel argues

(c)iStock.com/john shepherd

Organisations in the UK are among the least likely globally to have a cloud-first strategy, according to a new report from Intel Security.

The study, which polled more than 2,000 senior IT professionals, found the UK had pretty miserable scores across the board compared to their international brethren. The UK’s score of 70% for businesses who are cloud-first – whilst still a reasonable number – lagged behind the global average of more than 80%, while only 7% of UK firms said they stored all of their data in the public cloud, compared with 25% on average globally.

Similarly, the UK lags behind when it comes to having a DevSecOps – development, security, and operations – function in the business, with 28% compared to the 44% global average. As a result, shadow IT practices are likely to be more prevalent; almost three quarters (74%) of UK respondents said their organisation had public cloud services in use which were commissioned outside of the IT department, above the global average of 66%.

“Despite the majority belief that shadow IT is putting the organisation at risk, security technologies such as data loss prevention, encryption, and cloud access security brokers remain underutilised,” Intel noted in an executive summary. “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.”

One of the primary reasons for UK firms being tentative is that old favourite, the skills gap. Almost a quarter (24%) of respondents said that having skilled staff who understand cloud architecture will boost adoption rates. This rings true with similar research from Robert Half Technology earlier this month, which found that three quarters of UK-based CIOs and IT directors regularly encounter IT professionals who they believe are not up to the task.

In terms of global statistics, hybrid cloud usage increased from 19% to 57% of respondents year on year, while organisations using only private cloud dropped from 51% to 24%.

You can read the full report here (registration required).

Can Wire Data Be #APM? | @DevOpsSummit #DevOps #AI #ML #Monitoring

I recently read something – a blog, a tweet, a LinkedIn article perhaps – describing the use of wire data to analyze application performance. I remember that the author’s use of the term “APM” in this context caused one reader to comment, complaining that “you can’t call wire data APM.” This was around the same time I referred casually to Dynatrace’s wire data offering (Data Center Real User Monitoring, or DC RUM) as both “APM for IT Operations” and “probe-based APM.” So that complaint has stuck with me, prompting me to ask – and offer an answer to – the question.

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[session] #IoT: #EdgeComputing and #FogComputing | @ThingsExpo @Akamai

With billions of sensors deployed worldwide, the amount of machine-generated data will soon exceed what our networks can handle. But consumers and businesses will expect seamless experiences and real-time responsiveness. What does this mean for IoT devices and the infrastructure that supports them? More of the data will need to be handled at – or closer to – the devices themselves.

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[slides] #AWS Automation at @CloudExpo | @Datapipe #DevOps #Microservices

Automating AWS environments is important for all businesses as it simplifies creation and setup of cloud resources, facilitates otherwise complex processes, and streamlines management. The benefits of automation are clear: accelerate execution, reduce human error and unwanted consequences, and increase the enterprise’s ability to rapidly adapt, all while reducing the overall cost of IT operations. In his session at 17th Cloud Expo, Patrick McClory, Director of Automation and DevOps at Datapipe, delved deep into the technical specifics of automation for AWS including a discussion of best practices and real world use cases for PCI compliance, application management, continuous integration, CloudFormation and auto-scaling.

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[session] Alexa, Manage My Storage | @CloudExpo @Tintri #IoT #AI #DataCenter

Your homes and cars can be automated and self-serviced. Why can’t your storage? From simply asking questions to analyze and troubleshoot your infrastructure, to provisioning storage with snapshots, recovery and replication, your wildest sci-fi dream has come true.
In his session at @DevOpsSummit at 20th Cloud Expo, Dan Florea, Director of Product Management at Tintri, will provide a ChatOps demo where you can talk to your storage and manage it from anywhere, through Slack and similar services with Tintri’s web services architecture and APIs. Impress your DevOps team with smart and autonomous infrastructure.

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