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Great Leaders Are Ambidextrous, Are You?
By: Melvin Greer Managing Director, Greer Institute There are many important characteristics of great leaders. Team players, good listeners and visionary are clear hallmarks. But being ambidextrous is required now…
Cloud Computing Advantages and Disadvantages
What is Cloud Computing & what are its advantages & disadvantages. Join us for this installment of our Technical Insight series as expert Learning Tree instructor Kevin Jackson examines the…
Ingram Micro Honors Veterans with a $10,000 Gift to Veterans 360
On Veteran’s Day, hundreds of military veterans, active-duty service members and retirees were recognized and celebrated along with family members at the third annual Ingram Micro Veterans Day ceremonies held…
What Are You Waiting For? The Cloud Era is HERE!
by Kevin L. Jackson (This post first appeared at https://blog.learningtree.com) The revolutionary business aspects of cloud excite me every day, but the business diversity is even more exciting. This fact…
Schizophrenic About Cloud?
By Kevin L. Jackson This week Dell released its first Global Technology Adoption Index (GTAI). This survey of more than 2,000 global organizations took a close look at how organizations…
Why You Need to Pay Attention to Cloud Computing
(This post was originally published by Learning Tree International https://blog.learningtree.com/why-you-need-to-pay-attention-to-cloud-computing/ ) The adoption of cloud computing is revolutionizing today’s business. This trend has also elevated the importance of IT and…
Thriving in a Cloud, Big Data, Mobility and Security World
“The next generation of technology solutions will transform lives, businesses and economies.” This is the theme at this year’s Dell World opening keynote and this view is supported by Gartner’s…
Vets360 Founder Rick Collins Being Honored at the ‘Champions’ Leadership Conference
Veteran’s 360 and Rick Collins, Founder & Executive Director of Vets 360, Inc., are being honored at this year’sChampions Leadership, and Research Conference™ . This event, November 6th-7th, 2014 at…
“Cloud Musings” Joins Dell Content Provider Network
Cloud Musings, a GovCloud Network Property, is proud and honored to announce that we will now be serving over 3 Million Dell Community online daily viewers. Our content will focus…
Grounding the Cloud: Basics and Brokerage
“Picture Ben Franklin attempting to harness energy from a lightning-filled sky. The key tied to his kite was the middleman between electricity and the ground. This book details how using…
- Public cloud is more easily breached that a private cloud
- Any infrastructure that you manage or own is more secure than any cloud computing infrastructure
- Cloud-hosted applications are technically no different than enterprise-hosted applications
- The cloud service provider infrastructure and personnel will address and remediate all security issues
- The end user has very little control over cloud security
- A corporate network provides protection even when using cloud apps
- Cloud platforms lack security features and cloud providers offer no visibility into their platform
- Strong authentication mechanisms are sufficient for ensuring security
Although every one of these statements have been proven false, they continue to be socially propagated. While this is sometimes done for self-serving commercial reasons, perpetrators are often well-meaning individuals holding critical corporate responsibilities. This latter scenario has been driven by the lack of industry consensus on security and a dearth of nonvendor specific cloud security training and certifications. Because cloud computing is a young industry so this is understandable, but maintaining this view exacerbates the harm.
These troubling facts are why I was thrilled last month when cloud computing security industry leaders Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) and the International Information System Security Certification Consortium ((ISC)²) addressed this issue head-on by collaborating on the development and release of the Certified Cloud Security Professional (CCSP) Certification Program. Both nonprofits, their individual missions and goals are synergistic:
CSA: To promote best practices for providing security assurance within cloud computing and provide education on the uses of cloud computing to help secure all other forms of computing.
(ISC)²: To support and provide members and constituents with credentials, resources, and leadership to secure information and deliver value to society.
By stepping up to the challenge of cloud security certification, these organizations are explicitly addressing their missions.
Vendors are also stepping up. According to a recent CRN article, commercial cloud security platforms are helping enterprises mitigate the risks of using cloud-based applications and services. These offering are providing strong data protection capabilities by incorporating data loss prevention, data encryption and tokenization. Some cloud security companies provide identity and access
management capabilities while others monitor cloud-based systems for suspicious activity and provide policy enforcement, reporting and alerting capabilities. Cloud-based sandbox environments for controlling employee laptops, smartphones and tablets, regardless of their location, are in the marketplace as well.
A specific example of strong industry cloud security capabilities is Dell SecureWorks. It is positioned in the Leader’s Quadrant of Gartner’s Magic Quadrant for Global Managed Security Service Providers. In April 2015, the Info Security Products Guide recognized the company by announcing Dell as the Grand Trophy Winner as well as the winner of 12 additional awards, including one in cloud security for the Dell Cloud Access Manager.
The CCSP credential was designed to reflect the holder’s deep knowledge of cloud computing security. In order to gain this certification, a candidate must demonstrate hands-on information security and cloud computing experience. Certification requires a minimum of five years of cumulative, paid, full-time information technology experience, of which three years must be in information security and one year in one of six domains of the CCSP examination. It also requires:
- Passing an exam;
- A legal commitment to the code of ethics;
- Endorsement from an appropriate certified professional; and a
- Commitment to continuing professional education.
In providing the CCSP certification, CSA and (ISC)² have set a new benchmark for cloud security knowledge and competence. They have also established a reliable indicator for overall proficiency in cloud security and have gone a long way toward eliminating cloud computing security misconceptions and misunderstandings.
This post was written as part of the Dell Insight Partners program, which provides news and analysis about the evolving world of tech. Dell sponsored this article, but the opinions are my own and don’t necessarily represent Dell’s positions or strategies.
( Thank you. If you enjoyed this article, get free updates by email or RSS – © Copyright Kevin L. Jackson 2015)
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