CISO Survival Guide: How financial services organizations can more securely move to the cloud

It’s not just children and adults who face excitement and nervousness on the first day of school. The first day in the cloud can be daunting for financial services organizations, too. Chief Information Security Officers must lead the cloud security component of their organization’s digital transformation, a complicated task beset by many questions that the members of our Google Cybersecurity Action Team can help answer. We want to help you move into the brave new world of digital transformation and build engaged, robust cybersecurity teams as you go because there is no “one size fits all” approach to cloud security. We’ve worked with many financial services organizations in the middle of their transformations. Some want to revolutionize how their organizations achieve their cybersecurity goals. Others want to have minimal viable security controls for Day 1 launches. Each organization has its own operational and technological needs, its own funding sources, and its own risk appetites, all of which can fundamentally influence security strategy.We’re here to offer our real-world knowledge and experiences from Google’s Office of the Cloud CISO to help you move boldly – and more securely – to the cloud. We do this as part of our commitment to operate in a shared fate model that helps our customers achieve the best possible security outcomes. We strongly believe that secure organizations make for a more secure world.First come the questions, so many questionsMany times, we go into customer organizations as they are on the cusp of moving to the cloud and hear questions such as:I’ve never done this before, what do I need to worry about first?How do we make sure we don’t move our technical and cyber debt to the cloud? What are the key threats that I need to pay attention to?What on-premises baggage am I going to be left with?How do I organize my team to best address the things that we need to focus on?What becomes apparent from these conversations is that technology and security leaders use moving to the cloud as an opportunity to transform their businesses. This is an excellent plan. However, just because technical and cyber debt were not created intentionally does not mean that they can be wished away. It takes a concerted effort to reduce risk by building on solid fundamentals and leveraging the advantages of the cloud to pay down that debt.  These areas of concern and the strategies for addressing them can be categorized around your organization and its operations, technology, and people – and your CISO leadership.Teach your organization to think cloudRecently, security teams have been organizing around security compliance models such as the NIST cybersecurity framework. While this provides a foundation to discuss security disciplines and general security posture, it doesn’t necessarily provide the best way to organize your security team for optimal impact. In addition, most of these frameworks were developed before cloud was widely adopted in regulated industries. We now have more specialized knowledge and tools to more effectively serve specialized cases and verticals.  As use of the cloud becomes more prevalent, frameworks need to evolve and adapt to new threats and a new operating environment with rapid business changes and agile IT . Fundamentally, digital transformation is about organizational change management. A key component of preparing for digital transformation is guiding the people in your organization to evolve beyond on-premises mindsets to adopt new ones. In our discussion on how CISOs need to adapt their mental models for cloud security, we noted that security during and after a digital transformation should focus on how network and endpoint security, detection and response, data security, and identity and access management (IAM) function in the cloud — and how taking advantage of those differences can help you build a more resilient security posture.  The right questions can drive security changesOne key question to ask yourself when making strategic and tactical decisions is: Why am I implementing this security control?  Digital transformation provides an excellent opportunity to re-examine your team (becauseculture comes first in cloud transformation) and lead the way to changes that address your organization’s go-forward strategies when it comes to firewalls, antivirus software, applications, data protection, your overall security and risk postures, and your backup plans.  Changing technical controls first rarely leads to success.Your organization needs to have a clear vision and set objectives to determine how to most effectively achieve its security goals. Most of the time this means that CISOs and their teams have to reach outside their comfort zone and work with technology, business, and other partners to achieve success. If your organization goes down the path of “it’s always been done this way on-premises,” your cloud transformation is more apt to be inefficient and ultimately block the business from achieving agility and security.  At the September conference Measuring Cyber Risk in the Financial Services Sector hosted by MIT and the Federal Reserve Board, an audience member posed an important question to the panel: Why do cyber insurers ask if I have file integrity monitoring installed?This kind of question from cyber insurers is indicative of the mindset that should evolve with the digital transformation process. We want to be open to new opportunities to rethink practices and architecture. File integrity in a vacuum means very little to the overall risk reduction of your organization. Depending on their objective, cyber insurers could have asked a different set of questions, such as: How do you ensure that critical payment data is not altered in the transaction flow? And how do you ensure that software running in production is authorized and not altered?  Both questions could be answered with file integrity monitoring. However, answering a question on a cyber insurer’s questionnaire provides little to no value. It’s a check-the-box exercise that doesn’t provide a measurable security benefit. Cloud provides the same opportunities to rethink standard controls and generate better security and business outcomes.  As you begin implementing security in the cloud, keep in mind what your organization’s ideal security posture should be and come to an agreement with stakeholders (including business and IT leaders) about how you can set and achieve your goals. The first steps offer an invaluable “pressure test” for your organization – and take comfort in the fact that very few CISOs get it right on the first try. That’s why you should be adaptable, be open to change, and work to minimize organizational strife as much as possible.  We will continue this discussion in the next blog focused on the realities of starting the operational transformation.To learn more now, check out our podcast on CISO frustrations, successes, and lessons learned, and our guidance report on cloud security transformations. ReviewGoogle Cybersecurity Action Team site for additional papers and other guidance.Related ArticleHow CISOs need to adapt their mental models for cloud securityCISOs: How well do you speak cloud? Here are 6 tips for adapting your mental models of security.Read Article
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform

How IoT, AI, and Digital Twins are helping achieve sustainability goals

Organizations striving to improve their sustainability can make progress toward those goals by using the Internet of Things (IoT) and AI technology that monitors and analyzes their use of resources and resulting emissions. However, businesses adopting IoT for other reasons often improve their sustainability as a side benefit as well.

Nearly three-fourths of IoT adopters with near-term sustainability goals view IoT solutions as “very important” for reaching those goals. The combination of sensor devices, edge and cloud computing, and AI and machine learning can provide data and analytical insights into how resources are being used, where leaks or faults are occurring and affecting consumption, and where efficiency can be improved. Additionally, Digital Twins technology can create digital models of real-world equipment, buildings, or even smart cities for more detailed insights into how they can be run more sustainably.

Our recently published e-book, “Improving sustainability and smarter resource use with IoT technology” goes further in-depth on the following insights and case studies about IoT and AI solutions and sustainability.

How digital technology can aid sustainability efforts

With greater awareness of climate change and increasing regulation around activities related to emissions and resource usage, sustainability efforts are becoming an urgent priority at many organizations. Microsoft has established transparent goals and tracking of its progress toward carbon-neutral operations and offers a software solution to help others record and report their environmental impact.

We're also using Microsoft Azure IoT platform tools, to help power solutions in the following sustainability categories:

Efficient energy production and distribution: Digital tools are being applied to help electricity production plants—a significant source of air emissions—operate as efficiently and cleanly as possible. Utilities are using IoT solutions to monitor and manage electricity transmission and distribution grids to achieve maximum efficiency, route additional power as demand fluctuates, and detect outages faster. They’re also helping to remotely control renewable energy facilities such as wind farms. Our customer smartPulse offers a solution designed to manage electricity distribution and trading to give utilities the ability to manage imbalances in a financially favorable way.
Creating smarter, carbon-neutral buildings: The construction and operation of buildings create 38 percent of total energy-related emissions of carbon dioxide around the world, creating an enormous opportunity for smart building solutions to make a notable impact on the carbon footprint of buildings. IoT technology, Digital Twins modeling, and AI have proven especially useful in managing buildings by automating lighting and climate-control systems, as well as modeling the environmental effects of any design or operational changes. Vasakronan, a global leader in sustainability, has adopted IoT and Azure Digital Twins solutions for its commercial and office properties across Sweden, leading to notable energy cost savings.
Improving public infrastructure: Updating infrastructure with IoT technology can make it more sustainable and create other livability improvements, such as increasing safety and reducing excess light pollution. The city of Valencia in Spain saw this when city officials launched a public lighting upgrade. The project included replacing lighting in a national park, where too much light can disrupt wildlife and plants. Light solution provider Schréder and Codit, a cloud integration solutions provider, teamed to upgrade more than 100,000 lighting fixtures and tie in Azure IoT technologies. The city reduced its electricity consumption, cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent and saving millions of euros annually.
Agriculture and food production: Data-gathering and analytical technology informs decisions that lead to better environmental practices involving planting, watering, and pesticide use. Computer Vision can detect when weeds or pests are threatening a growing area. Related technology is contributing to the development of more automation at a time when farm labor shortages are becoming more common. The N.C. State Plant Sciences Initiative, for example, is using faster and more efficient data management to tackle agriculture’s biggest challenges, with the aim of creating better predictive food analytics, increasing food safety, and making more productive crops.

Improving business performance at the same time

Beyond the benefits of reducing consumption of natural resources and reining in emissions, sustainability efforts can generate business value. Forty percent of survey respondents in a recent survey said they expect their company’s sustainability programs to generate modest or significant value in the next five years. That value primarily comes from saving energy costs, cutting back on needed materials, and improving operational efficiency.

Get started with sustainable IoT solutions

By combining sustainability goals with innovative solutions, businesses and people can limit their everyday impact on the planet’s resources. Azure IoT can help transform businesses to be more efficient, manage renewable energy production, reduce waste, or accelerate the development and launch of sustainably oriented apps. A range of end-to-end solutions from our ecosystem of partners addresses sustainability in a variety of ways as well.

Learn more from our e-book, “Improving sustainability and smarter resource use with IoT technology,” or discover how Azure IoT can help your organization adopt IoT, AI, and related technologies.

Learn more

Find out more about Microsoft Sustainability in action.
Read the IoT Signals Report.

Quelle: Azure

AWS Migration Hub Orchestrator unterstützt jetzt die Migration von Microsoft SQL Server

AWS Migration Hub Orchestrator bietet Unterstützung für Microsoft SQL Server, um die Migration von SQL-Server-Datenbanken zu AWS zu vereinfachen und zu beschleunigen. Jetzt kannst du ganz einfach einen SQL-Server-Migrationsworkflow erstellen, die manuellen Aufgaben der Migration automatisieren und den Migrationsfortschritt in derselben Konsole verfolgen. Mit dieser Funktion kannst du die Zeit und den Aufwand für die SQL-Server-Migration reduzieren, um Verzögerungen und überhöhte Kosten zu vermeiden.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon S3 auf Outposts optimiert die Speicherverwaltung mit neuen Lebenszyklus-Aktionen und Filtern weiter

Amazon S3 auf Outposts unterstützt jetzt zusätzliche S3-Lebenszyklusregeln zur Optimierung des Kapazitätsmanagements. Jetzt kannst du deine Speicherkapazität optimieren, indem du Objekte auslaufen lässt, wenn sie veralten oder durch neuere Versionen ersetzt werden. Du kannst diese S3-Lebenszykluskonfigurationen für einen gesamten Bucket auf deinem Outpost oder für eine Teilgruppe der Objekte im Bucket einsetzen, indem du nach Präfixen, Objekt-Tags oder Objektgröße filterst.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com