10 January 2011

How to Check on Your Cloud Provider

Potential cloud-services customers face a tough problem: How can they trust cloud providers enough to hire them when the providers refuse to reveal important infrastructure details for reasons of security and practicality?

These providers say they can’t open their network architectures to customer scrutiny for fear the details will give potential attackers a blueprint for compromising security. They also say the time involved in answering each customer’s questions would be prohibitive.

The bottom line, as one service provider put it earlier this year, is that customers will never get the level of transparency they want. "We won't let you audit to the degree that you would audit your own infrastructure," says Adam Swidler, a product marketing manager at Google (GOOG), speaking about Google’s cloud services. "It's never going to be the same as auditing your own infrastructure. You'll have to extend some level of trust to third-party verification."

While customers may not be able to walk through cloud providers’ data centers and grill their CISOs, they can submit probing questions whose answers may serve the purpose, says the Cloud Security Alliance, which has written a questionnaire businesses can adapt for their own purposes when trying to assess the suitability of cloud service providers.

Called the Consensus Assessments Initiative Questionnaire, the document is a well-thought-out framework for assessing cloud security. “This question set is a simplified distillation of the issues, best practices and control … intended to help organizations build the necessary assessment processes for engaging with cloud providers,” the CSA says.

Key questions to ask:

Does the provider perform regular penetration testing and internal as well as external security audits that customers can view?
Are customers allowed to perform their own vulnerability tests?
Is data logically segmented or encrypted per customer so one customers’ data isn’t swept up inadvertently with another’s, say, in response to a subpoena?
Can the provider recover data customer by customer in case of a loss?
How are intellectual property rights protected?
Does the provider tag virtual and physical machines used by each customer and can they guarantee that data is stored only in certain countries http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/110410-microsoft-cloud-services-hampered-by.html but not in others as per some countries’ data-storage laws?
What are the provider’s policies for responding to governmental requests for customer data?
What are provider policies about retaining customer data and can they follow customer policies for wiping data from the provider’s network?
Does the provider inventory its own assets and its supplier relationships?
Does it train its staff and document that training in its own and its tenants’ security controls?

http://www.cio.com/article/647445/How_to_Check_on_Your_Cloud_Provider?source=rss_cloud_computing

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