Welcome!

Big Data Journal Authors: Elad Yoran, Elizabeth White, David Honan, Liz McMillan, Mark van Rijmenam

Related Topics: Cloud Expo, SOA & WOA, Virtualization, Web 2.0, Security, Big Data Journal, SDN Journal

Cloud Expo: Article

Moving Your Company’s Application or Service into the Cloud?

Beware of what your customers will expect

A number of studies I’ve recently read indicate that more enterprises will use cloud services in 2013 than ever before.  This fact is not lost on many of my software vendor clients, who are transitioning many of their on-premises products into cloud-based offerings.

The problem many of these vendors are facing is the inability to address data privacy and security demands placed upon them by their customers due to the weak contractual protections offered by the vendor’s hosting providers.  As a result, the time and cost savings expected by leveraging the cloud model are lost by extended contract negotiations between the vendor, customer, and hosting provider.

Here is a typical example:

  1. Software vendor wishes to offer its cloud-based service to a financial services company.
  2. The financial services company sends the software vendor its detailed requirements for information security controls, data privacy, breach detection and response, security program details and systems, disaster recovery, encryption, physical security, and data destruction and certification.
  3. Software vendor reviews the contract with its hosting provider to determine whether the financial services company’s security requirements can be met.
  4. Software vendor discovers that its hosting provider only commits to something like “we will implement reasonable and appropriate measures designed to help you secure your content against accidental or unlawful loss, access or disclosure.”  (See, for example, Amazon’s Web Services Agreement, Section 3.1.)
  5. Panic ensues.

Generally, at this point the software vendor is left with a couple of options:  One, attempt to renegotiate its hosting provider contract to incorporate the voluminous information security controls demanded by its financial services company customer, or two, convince the financial services company to drop its demands and accept language similar to Amazon’s above.  You can guess how well each of these options will work out.

So what is a software vendor to do?

Before accepting a hosting provider’s contract, know your target customer base.  Are your customers regulated by laws like Gramm-Leach-Bliley or HIPAA?  Is your service likely going to be storing sensitive information of your customers?  If the answer to these or similar questions is yes, then selecting a hosting provider willing to accommodate and contractually commit to specific data security protocols is paramount.  Many enterprise users are feeling both internal and external pressure to shave costs and move certain services and data into the cloud – even if doing so creates heightened risks and liabilities.  But simply explaining to these users that “our hosting provider doesn’t provide these assurances” usually won’t cut it.

In my next post, I’ll discuss certain tactics software vendors can use with their hosting providers to create more robust and meaningful protections for them, and their customers.

More Stories By Dan Pepper

Dan Pepper is the managing member of Pepper Law Group, LLC, a boutique technology law firm, and has spent nearly 20 years in the information technology law field, including acting as in-house counsel for Oracle Corporation. He presents at conferences worldwide on the legal risks associated with cloud computing.

Cloud Expo Breaking News
In an ideal developer/systems administrator’s world, most applications would deploy seamlessly to multiple platforms and scale elastically with minimal effort bringing the unprecedented agility of the cloud within immediate reach of developer teams and IT organizations. OpenStack, a RackSpace and NASA initiative, is now managed by an independent foundation and is supported by multiple vendors. It defines APIs for compute, storage, networking, services, monitoring, and additional infrastructure...
Companies around the world are moving into on-premise private cloud environments. Many connect their private cloud to their public cloud service providers. In his session at 12th Cloud Expo | Cloud Expo New York [June 10-13], Brian Patrick Donaghy will talk about examples of what worked, what failed and why we should think about this evolution.
Enterprise cloud adoption revolves around pushing the BYOD movement and focusing on data security. In his session at the 12th International Cloud Expo, Ross Brouse, COO and President of Solar VPS, will cover how cloud adoption is driven by consumerism, humanity’s need to socialize, our addiction to new gadgets and the ability of data to stay secure in a growing collaborative world. The cloud is a drug and we’re just getting hooked. Ross Brouse is the COO and President of Solar VPS. He is a tr...
Organizations across the world are increasingly starting to see the benefits of moving more and more services to the cloud. The focus on the cost-saving potential of cloud is rapidly shifting to completely transforming the business with cloud. As organizations are investing enormous sums on technology they are starting to realize that in order to maximize the return on investment and accelerate the business transformation process the first area of focus should be people. By ensuring the organiza...
A recent study by analyst firm IDC reports that in 2012, 1.7 million cloud computing-related roles across the globe could not be filled due to the lack of training, certification and experience in the applicant pool. As the global demand for cloud and big data expertise increases, employers are finding it difficult to recruit talent, which is slowing down the ability for organizations to adopt, implement, and realize benefits from innovative platforms like OpenStack. In this session join Clo...
Our more interconnected planet is accelerating the adoption and convergence of next-generation architectures, in the form of cloud, mobile and instrumented physical assets. Organizations that can effectively balance optimization and innovation, will be in a position to leverage new systems of engagement, out maneuver their peers and achieve desired outcomes. In the Opening Keynote at 12th Cloud Expo | Cloud Expo New York, IBM GM & Next Generation Platform CTO Dr Danny Sabbah will detail the crit...
The cloud-enabled data center sits at the center of IT transformation. It facilitates the interconnection and communities that come together, propelling growth for both buyers and sellers. In his session at the 12th International Cloud Expo, Gerry Fassig, CoreSite’s Vice President of Sales, will discuss how CoreSite is bringing together best-of-breed partners through the Open Cloud Exchange resulting in public, private, and hybrid cloud interconnection and management as well as connectivity to...
Companies around the world are collecting massive amounts of data everyday that’s sitting around and not being utilized. Take for example the fact that companies collect demographic and location-based data via mobile devices all the time, but have to figure out how to monetize that data. In this session, Joyent CTO and founder Jason Hoffman will examine the state of Big Data, taking a look at what we're doing now to discussing what's on the horizon, as companies prepare and realign their busines...
Enterprises can't close their doors just because integration tools won't cope with the volume of information that their systems produce. As each day goes by, their information will become larger and more complicated, and enterprises must constantly struggle to manage the integration of dozens (or hundreds) of systems. Apache Hadoop has quickly become the technology of choice for enterprises that need to perform complex analysis of petabytes of data, but few are aware of its potential to hand...
Planning scalable environments isn't terribly difficult, but it does require a change of perspective. During this session we'll broaden our views to think on an Internet Scale by dissecting a video publishing application built with The SoftLayer Platform, Message Queuing, Object Storage, and Drupal. By examining a scalable modular application build that can handle unpredictable traffic, you'll be able to grow your development arsenal and pick up a few strategies to apply to your own projects.