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Compliance and Security Trends

 

Compliance and Security Trends

IT security and data compliance are major concerns for both enterprises and customers, and today’s cloud solutions have evolved to address these concerns. Vendors offer state-of-the-art data control and protection that reduces the risk of human error when managing sensitive data.

Complexity of compliance:

Compliance is a company’s priority as companies collect more data from more and more sources and governments enact data protection regulations such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). It is a matter. Cloud storage and applications improve access to business data and give enterprises more control over how information is managed. Data governance has become a central consideration for all IT investments, especially when implementing solutions that process sensitive financial data and other personal information about customers.

Better cloud security:

IT security threats are increasing. For example, the number of global ransomware attacks in which cybercriminals steal corporate data and hold them hostage until the ransom is paid increased nearly five-fold in 2020. Leading cloud providers support their solutions with best-in-class IT security practices. , Mitigates many of the threats.

 SASE:

As employees access more services and data from their devices outside their IT network, companies are rethinking their approach to security and risk management. Gartner’s coined word Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) is a cloud-based IT security approach that addresses the changing nature of work. Companies adopting the SASE architecture all benefit from cloud-based network security services such as secure gateways, firewalls, and zero-trust network access. This is a robust approach to IT security that gives businesses the peace of mind that they are delivering new cloud services quickly and their systems are well protected.

Cloud-based disaster recovery:

According to Forrester, disaster recovery is moving to the cloud, and by the end of 2021 more companies are expected to move on-premises disaster recovery to the public cloud. Similar to traditional disaster recovery, but cloud-based disaster recovery is generally cost-effective and time-efficient, with the added bonus of backing up corporate data to an external cloud server and being managed by an external provider. .. In addition, enterprises can add, modify, and remove data from these external systems as they see fit, without having to extend their own IT infrastructure. Companies also often rely on cloud-based disaster recovery for mission-critical servers and applications such as large databases and ERP systems.