
Securing your information
June 14, 2011, 11:36 AM — Cloud computing continues to make the headlines. Unfortunately, the recent news hasn't been good. I've never been one to let lemons go to waste, so let's make some lemonade by using the recent PlayStation Network hacks as a starting-off point to explore the importance of knowing what information security your cloud provider has in place. In short, what good is bad news if you can't learn something good from it?
The PlayStation Network blog
According to the PlayStation Network blog , "... between April 17 and April 19, 2011, certain PlayStation Network and Qriocity service user account information was compromised in connection with an illegal and unauthorized intrusion into our network." It's been reported that those breaches resulted in the compromise of personal data belonging to near 100 million account holders.
The PlayStation Network hack demonstrates the risk common to any cloud service adoption: The cloud provider may not handle your information as securely as you would like. When you use any cloud computing service, you are trusting it with information, whether that be personal, regulated, proprietary or if not sensitive information. Along these lines, you lose some of the control, or for the moment the perceived control, that you had when you did the same things in-house.
To continue reading, register here to become an Insider. You'll get free access to premium content from CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World. See more Insider content or sign in.
ITworld Answers is a service that helps IT pros resolve innovation questions. Post a question, and let your peers in the ITworld community take a crack at solving it!
- ·
Voip Information
- · Rackspace debuts OpenStack cloud servers
- · America's broadband adoption challenges
- · EPAM Systems Leverages the Cloud to Enhance Its Global Delivery Model With Nimbula Director
- · Telcom & Data intros emergency VOIP phones
- · Lorton Data Announces Partnership with Krengeltech Through A-Qua⢠Integration into DocuMailer
