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Category Archives: Cloud Computing

How Amazon is collaborating with community colleges to build Texas’ cloud computing workforce – WFAA.com

Posted: September 30, 2019 at 9:45 am

Texas education leaders and Amazon Web Services last week announced the creation of degree programs aimed at preparing students for careers in cloud computing.

Dallas County Community College District is one of 22 community colleges that is developing and will offer the two-year degree as early as next spring.

DCCCD Chancellor Joe May and Ken Eisner, director of Global Education Programs for AWS, offered more details about the program and how it will work:

Two or three years down the road, how will you judge whether this partnership has been a success?

Eisner: Were going to look at a whole slew of metrics around this. The first will include the number of institutions that launch the program, the number of faculty that are trained, and the number of students that enter in, but in the end, its about matriculations into jobs. Were going to be looking at internships, apprenticeship opportunities and hires to Amazon Web Services as well as our customers and partners.

Are most of the jobs in Dallas-Fort Worth or Texas, or will people be trained here for jobs that arent actually here?

Eisner: Amazon already currently employs over 22,000 people across Texas. We have 15 fulfillment centers, and weve invested over $10 million in various pieces of infrastructure and research. There is a big focus in Texas, and there has been for a number of years. People who come through these programs are going to be great employees at AWS, at Lockheed, and at other customers and partners in Texas, but theyll also have skills that can translate into the global environment.

What is it about DCCCD, or Texas in general, that makes this partnership the right fit for AWS?

Eisner: Community colleges are this amazing flywheel into the educational environment. They have dual enrollment with early college (programs) with high schools. They have transfer and articulation agreements with four-year institutions and direct partnerships that go inside and outside of industry. Places like Dallas County Community College District have moved fast under great leadership, and we need people that have that bias for action. They also address this underserved environment that often doesnt matriculate into the tech industry, whether its students from low income, minority backgrounds or persons in rural communities.

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Do you anticipate that expanding the pipeline of workers with strong cloud computing skills will translate into more Amazon operations, functions, jobs, offices or buildings here?

Eisner: Amazon has invested a significant amount into Texas, as I mentioned. Weve had a history of investing in Texas and continuing to invest more over time. So the investment into education, the investment into the workforce, is an investment into our future employees along with the future investment of customers and partners.

Whats the most important piece of this partnership?

May: A big, big part of it for us is connecting to industry. I cant talk about them now, but we will be rolling out some others with some other organizations in the very near future and starting some new ones of this type. Weve made a real commitment to connecting to industry and then to really sitting down to work collaboratively to build out curriculum.

What differentiates the partnership with AWS from similar collaborations?

May: This was a great one in that they were already thinking that way and we were already working with them on some other efforts, so it was obvious that we would come together and build off of existing relationships.

Did this in any way evolve out of the effort for an Amazon U that was part of the incentive package in the attempt to lure Amazons HQ2?

May: That was something we initially created as Amazon Institute in the DCCCD, and others working on the project expanded it. We still will build in the downtown area, and we still partner in collaborative ways with industry, so a big piece of that that was put out there, were going forward with.

How is the curriculum being created?

Eisner: Faculty at Dallas Community College and across the state are collaborating in an unprecedented way to create curriculum that can work across the institutions, that is adapted to local standards, (and) that meets the needs of the students and employer demand in Texas. The faculty and instructional designers at these schools are doing the heavy lifting because its the students in the classroom that are being impacted.

Whats the biggest challenge to creating career-connected networks?

May: The real challenge today is the speed at which business is changing and technology is changing. It makes it real easy for a college to get behind and for students not to understand what the opportunities are. When we try to do this in isolation, operating in silos, which is often the case in education, then even if we miss the mark just a little bit, we miss the mark, and it really creates a challenge for the students and the employers to come together. So we really value close relationships like we have with Amazon Web Services.

RELATED:New apartment and townhome community kicks off in Dallas Medical District

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The Top Cloud Computing Certifications for Cloud Professionals – Solutions Review

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If you want to showcase your expertise in a particular field of IT technology, you should consider studying for and earning some certifications. Certifications demonstrate that the holder has knowledge and skills for a specific tool, industry, or technology. Often, these certifications are offered by major vendors in that technology space, and that holds true for cloud computing as well. Leading cloud providers and cloud all offer their own cloud certification series to those who exhibit proficiency for their cloud environment.

For businesses, these certifications show that your company and employees are skilled in cloud computing. They can also sign up their workers for cloud certifications in order to boost their companys expertise. What are the best cloud certifications for cloud professionals to earn? We listed the top cloud computing certifications that any user of cloud solutions should consider earning.

Cost: $119 USD/$319 USD

For those who want or need to be certified on the basics of cloud computing, the CompTIA Cloud Essentials and Cloud+ certifications are the way to go. These are vendor-neutral certifications that aim to bring IT professionals up to speed on how to operate the cloud specifically, how to implement the cloud, learn cloud computing terms, and improve productivity with cloud solutions. The Cloud Essentials certification is designed for managers or support staff that arent directly involved with developing or running cloud solutions, while the Cloud+ certification is for IT professionals.

Cost: $150 USD/$300 USD

If your IT department builds and deploys solutions in AWS, then the AWS Certified Solutions Architect certification is for you. This certification shows that the recipient is able to successfully construct a tech solution using the AWS architecture and maintain it throughout its entire lifecycle. It requires hands-on experience developing and deploying solutions using AWS services, both ones that provide resources for the project and that help businesses manage and deliver them. IT professionals with more than two years of experience in developing AWS-powered solutions should also consider the Professional-grade Solutions Architect certification.

Cost: $330 USD

For business and IT professionals that build solutions that run on Azure, the Azure Solutions Architect Expert certification is a must-have. This certification demonstrates the ability to design applications, data platforms, containers, etc. using the Azure platform. Workers looking to earn this certification also need to know how to deploy and configured optimized infrastructures, determine workload requirements, and design business continuity strategies.

Cost:$200 USD

For enterprises that heavily utilize Google Cloud to build solutions, the Google Professional Cloud Architect certification shows expertise in leveraging Google Cloud services. Not only does this certification indicate that the user is very familiar with the Google Cloud platform, it specifically shows that you can develop Google Cloud-driven business solutions. By earning this certification, users demonstrate that theyre able to build, secure, and manage a cloud architecture, optimize the solutions technical and business processes, and configure the solution with security features.

Cost:$599 USD

The (ISC) offers the Certified Cloud Security Professional certification shows that the recipient knows how to build and manage secure cloud solutions. The certification covers cloud security best practices, policies, and procedures established by (ISC) that demonstrates expertise in designing secure cloud solutions. While this certification requires more knowledge and experience than the other certifications on this list, its one of the most essential certifications for security professionals and cloud architects.

Running a cloud environment and need help managing the cloud services you use? Our MSP Buyers Guide contains profiles on the top cloud managed service providers for AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud, as well as questions you should ask vendors and yourself before buying. We also offer an MSP Vendor Map that outlines those vendors in a Venn diagram to make it easy for you to select potential providers.

Check us out onTwitter for the latest in Enterprise Cloud news and developments!

Dan is a tech writer who writes about Enterprise Cloud Strategy and Network Monitoring for Solutions Review. He graduated from Fitchburg State University with a Bachelor's in Professional Writing. You can reach him at dhein@solutionsreview.com

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Amazon Partners with Texas Schools to Offer Cloud Computing Degree – ConnectCRE

Posted: at 9:45 am

September 30, 2019

Amazon Web Services will partner with community colleges and technical schools throughout Texas to develop and offer an Associate of Applied Science degree in cloud computing. Texas Secretary of State Ruth Hughs made the announcement, noting that the goal of the partnership is to develop a workforce that will be ready for cloud computing job positions.

Beginning in spring 2020, the states community colleges and technical schools will offer the 60-hour credit program, which will be aligned with industry needs. The program will also help meet the goals of the 60X30 Texas Higher Education Plan, which aims to see at least 60% of Texas ages 25-34 receive a certificate or degree by 2030.

In addition, primary and secondary institutions will implement AWS Educate, Amazons initiative to support cloud learning with students or faculty, and to build computer and date-related skills for K-12 curriculum throughout the state.

Read more at Seecretary of State Texas

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In 2019, lawyers are using mobile and cloud computing more than ever – Idaho Business Review

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A little over a decade ago, the mobile revolution was launched when the iPhone was released in 2007. Just one year earlier, Amazon rolled out its first cloud computing service: Amazon EC2. Now, in 2019, many of the most popular websites, including Netflix, Pinterest and Reddit, are run on cloud servers hosted by Amazon Web Services.

Its no coincidence that mobile and cloud computing tools launched so close in time. After all, mobile and cloud computing go hand-in-hand; together they make todays computing possible. This is because mobile devices alone are limited by their memory, processing power and battery life. But when mobile phones and tablets are used with cloud computing tools, the data processing and storage needed to make mobile apps useful and functional can happen outside of mobile devices on cloud computing servers.

This combined utility has contributed to the significant rise in lawyers use of cloud and mobile computing in recent years. According to the American Bar Associations most recent Legal Technology Survey, small firm lawyers are making the move to cloud-based legal software more than ever before, with 55% of lawyers surveyed reporting that theyve used cloud computing software for law-related tasks over the past year, up from 38% in 2016.

And many more are thinking of switching to cloud-based legal software in the year to come. Small law firms were the most likely to plan to do so. The survey results showed that firms with two to 9 lawyers led the way at 15%. Next up was law firms with 10-49 lawyers at 14%, followed by firms with 50-99 lawyers at 13%.

According to the survey, the reasons for using cloud computing software are many. Ease of access from any location was the most popular reason (68%), followed by 24/7 availability (59%), and the affordability and the low cost of entry (48%). Other reasons provided by the lawyers surveyed included robust data back-up and recovery (46%), the ability to get the software up and running quickly (40%), the elimination of IT and software management requirements (34%), and last but certainly not least, better security than the firms were able to provide in-office (31%).

The top reason cited for making the switch ease of access from any location isnt surprising, since lawyers are more reliant on mobile devices in 2019 than theyve ever been. In fact, according to the survey, 95% of lawyers reported that they use their smartphones outside of the office for law-related purposes. And, nearly half of all lawyers 49% reported that they used their tablet for law-related purposes while away from the office.

The most popular type of phone used by lawyers is the iPhone, with 72% preferring it. Androids were next at 27%, followed by Blackberrys (2%) and then Windows Mobile (1%). Notably, despite the prominence of iPhone use by lawyers, 43% of lawyers surveyed reported that their firms supported multiple platforms for smartphones, rather than just one type of smartphone.

Fifty percent of lawyers have downloaded a legal-specific app to their smartphone, with legal research apps being the most popular. Similarly, 50% of lawyers have downloaded a general business app to their smartphone. Dropbox was the most popular, with 77% of lawyers reporting that theyd downloaded it. LinkedIn was next at 63%, followed by Evernote (37%), LogMeIn (15%), and DocsToGo (14%).

Do any of these statistics about how small firm lawyers are using cloud-based legal software and mobile devices surprise you? How mobile are you compared to your colleagues? And, is your firm in the cloud yet? If not, maybe its time make the switch.

Nicole Black is a director at MyCase.com, a cloud-based law practice management platform. She is also of counsel to Fiandach & Fiandach in Rochester and is a GigaOM Pro analyst. She is the author of the ABA book Cloud Computing for Lawyers, coauthors the ABA book Social Media for Lawyers: the Next Frontier, and co-authors Criminal Law in New York, a West-Thomson treatise. She speaks regularly at conferences regarding the intersection of law and technology. She publishes three legal blogs and can be reached at niki@mycase.com.

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Will the XaaS economy create ‘Netflix for cars’? – Gigabit Magazine – Technology News, Magazine and Website

Posted: at 9:45 am

From enterprise cloud computing and cyber security systems to Disney movies and vegan chicken nuggets, the economy has undergone a radical shift over the last few years. The emerging trend of on-demand offerings purchasable over the internet - often as part of an ongoing subscription - is predicted to create a market that exceeds $345bn per year by 2026.

Just as companies looking to adopt a new cloud architecture or cyber security system are increasingly likely to lease the use of one from AWS, Microsoft, Salesforce - the list goes on - rather than build their own solution from scratch or buy outright something that will require updates and ongoing maintenance. Theas-a-service market is as much about purchasing expertise and peace of mind as it is about price, as owning everything from a piece of software to a Volkswagen Jetta is, as my car-driving colleagues assure me, an inexhaustible void that gobbles up time and money like a collapsing black hole.

Last year in the UK, the average driver in London spent 595 per month on owning and operating their vehicle. While London is famously more expensive than the rest of the country, in East Anglia - one of the cheapest places to own a car in the country - the average driver spent 437 per month, which represented 24% of their income. In an economy where the minimum wage has drifted further from the rate of inflation for decades, and political (potential) catastrophes like Brexit on the horizon, companies and consumers are welcoming the flexibility and peace of mind that come with an XaaS economy.

In the same way that the rise of subscription-based streaming services have reshaped the way we listen to enjoy music (in the first quarter of this year, streaming services accounted for 80% of the music industrys revenue) are we on the verge of a new age of mobility-as-a-service?

Well, maybe is the answer, as a number of early-mover vehicle subscription services have struggled to find a foothold between car ownership and the growing micro-mobility market (e-scooters and bicycle rentals that have become commonplace in urban environments that are increasingly hostile to cars) but there are a number of companies hoping that their business models will allow them to stand out enough to find a permanent niche. Gigabit Magazine explores the growing ranks of startups and corporations offering car ownership as a service around the world.

Big business?

Some of the earliest movers into the car subscription space were those with the scale and, more importantly, cars to do so. In addition to rental companies like Hertz and Enterprise, which offer subscription services in addition to their preexisting rental business options, major automaker Ford launched a subscription service in 2017. Through its subsidiary Canopy, Ford offered variable-term leases for Ford owners in San Francisco, eventually expanding to Los Angeles and Dallas. A total of 3,800 subscribers used Canvas to acquire new Ford vehicles.

This month, however, it was announced that Ford was leaving the market, only a few short years after entering it. Canopy was sold to Fair - an app based subscription provider with a 45,000 customer base operating in 30 cities - for an undisclosed amount. The fact that Ford so quickly entered and exited what initially would seem to be such a straightforward market (particularly for a company that makes and has access to a huge number of cars) is a clear demonstration that the car-as-a-service space is more complex than it appears.

"We have had to face the hard reality that despite our efforts, we underestimated the investment and resources that are truly necessary to make our service successful in these complex transportation markets amid a quickly-changing mobility landscape, read a statement from communal short term vehicle company Car2Go released this month. Since 2009, the Mercedes-Benz and BMW-backed company has provided users with hourly car rental services. Now, however, Car2Go (in the process of rebranding to Share Now) is withdrawing its services from Austin, Texas; Calgary, Alberta; Portland, Ore.; and Denver beginning Oct. 31 and Chicago starting Dec. 31.

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Canoo

Considering the hardships experienced by major automakers like Ford to turn a preexisting vehicle fleet into a profitable business avenue, building a new (electric) vehicle entirely from scratch and introducing it via subscription service to one of the most congested and complex road networks on the planet may seem a little, well, lets say herculean. However, its exactly what one Los Angeles-based startup is in the process of doing.

Slated to hit the streets in 2021, Canoo recently unveiled its pioneer model last week. The slightly rotund, bread-box of the future vehicle is electric, has a range of around 250 miles and seats as many people as a large SUV.

I would call it a loft on wheels, Ulrich Kranz, the co-founder of Canoo told the Los Angeles Times. It has the interior space of a large SUV and the footprint of a compact car. Predicted to have an operational lifespan of between 10 and 12 years, which is longer than the majority of electric vehicles, Canoo hopes to spread the initial production costs over a greater span of time.

Customers will pay a one-time membership fee up front, followed by a monthly charge for unlimited access to Canoos vehicle. The subscription, which will be reasonably priced, according to Kranz, will be available in Los Angeles and San Francisco (with an East Coast launch up next) and covers registration, taxes, insurance, maintenance and unlimited mileage.

Cluno

Based in Munich, Germany, Cluno allows its clients to book out a variety of cars - ranging from the Opel Corsa to high-end Porsches - for a monthly fee. Clients can reportedly book a car online in as little as three minutes, for a fixed, monthly package price that includes everything except fuel.

Last week, Cluno announced that it had raised around 125mn in debt financing in order to support further growth.

Nico Polleti, Co-Founder and CEO of Cluno said, Car subscription has proved to be very successful as a mobility concept and is on the verge of entering the mass market. As an innovation driver in a fast-paced industry, we want to take our business model to the next level as quickly as possible. Our goals are scaling and, in the long run, internationalization. Both the financial resources, as well as the trust of the financial institutions, are a crucial lever.

SelfDrive.ae

The first of its kind in the United Arab Emirates, SelfDrive.aes new Microlease subscription service launched in the country today. A flexible and convenient on demand monthly car subscription service that offers a new alternative to owning or leasing a car with option to switch cars every month as per his (or her) requirement with no long term commitments, Microlease is predicted to tap into the growing desire for flexibility being expressed by millennials in the UAE.

The company reportedly partners with car manufacturers, dealer networks and leasing companies to offer a range of from economy, to mid size Saloons, compact SUVs, MUVs and 4x4 SUVs.

Soham Shah, Founder & Director, SelfDrive.ae, said "Microlease is one of our custom designed product for the region that would offer unprecedented flexibility to customers for on demand monthly car subscription starting from 1 month going up to 36 months with monthly rates starting from $271 per month. This subscription is open to all and can join by making the first reservation online on our website or mobile interface or just by giving us a call. Microlease is a game changer for the automotive Industry and is the future of on demand car leasing for the millennials."

Yes, he did just refer to SelfDrive.ae's customer base as the millennials, but otherwise its a pretty interesting idea.

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Alibaba is building its own AI cloud computing chip – ITProPortal

Posted: at 9:45 am

Chinese retail giant Alibaba is building its own artificial intelligence chip to power proprietary cloud offerings.

The Hanguang 800 chip is being used it for product search, automatic translation and personalisation within Alibaba itself. Further down the road, however, the chip will be used to power the companys cloud computing offerings.

The launch of Hanguang 800 is an important step in our pursuit of next-generation technologies, boosting computing capabilities that will drive both our current and emerging businesses while improving energy-efficiency, Alibaba CTO Jeff Zhang said in a statement.

Right now, the company isnt planning on selling the chip as a standalone commercial product. It was built by DAMO Academy, Alibabas two years old research institute, and T-Head, its semiconductor division.

Domestically, Alibaba is the king of the cloud infrastructure services market, with a 47 per cent share for the first quarter of the year. Globally, however, it is an entirely different story, as it has to compete with the likes of Amazon, Google, Microsoft and IBM.

According to Gartner, Amazon kept almost half (47.8 per cent) of the global IaaS public cloud services market share last year, while Alibaba was third with a total of 7.7 per cent share.

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Linux Foundation exec believes edge computing will be more important than cloud computing – ZDNet

Posted: at 9:45 am

Once upon a time, back when we all had mainframes and then servers in our offices, we had edge computing. Our compute power was literally down the hall. Then, along came the cloud, and all that changed. Computers were hundreds of miles but milliseconds away. Now, with the rise of IoT, 5G, and our never-satisfied need for speed, edge computing is coming back with a vengeance. Indeed, at his keynote at Open Networking Summit in Belgium, Arpit Joshipura, The Linux Foundation's general manager of networking, said "edge computing will overtake cloud computing" by 2025.

When Joshipura is talking about edge computing, he means compute and storage resources that are five to 20 milliseconds away. He also means edge computing should be an open, interoperable framework. This framework should be independent of hardware, silicon, cloud, or operating system. Open-edge computing should also work with any edge-computing use case: Internet of Things (IoT) edge, a telecom edge, cloud edge, or enterprise edge, whatever, "Our goal here is to unify all of these."

This is being done via LF Edge. This Linux Foundation organization seeks to bring all edge computing players under one umbrella with one technology. Its purpose is to create a software stack that unifies a fragmented edge market around a common, open vision for the future of the industry.

To make this happen, Joshipura announced two more projects were being incorporated into LF Edge: Baetyl and Fledge.

Formerly known as Baidu OpenEdge, Baetyl is meant to seamlessly extend cloud computing, data, and services to edge devices, thus enabling developers to build light, secure, and scalable edge applications. Its target audience is IoT edge device developers who need cloud computing, data, and services.

Why did Baidu, China's answer to Google, contribute the code to LF Edge? Watson Yin, a Baidu VP, explained: "[Baidu] decided to donate Baetyl, the intelligent edge computing framework, to the community, hoping to reciprocate the open-source community while continuously contributing cutting-edge technologies to the global technology ecosystem."

In short, Baidu, like so many other companies, believes that open source helps its business.

Fledge, once known as FogLAMP, is an open-source framework and community for the industrial edge. Its focus is on critical operations, predictive maintenance, situational awareness, and safety. Fledge is designed to integrate Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT), sensors and modern machines by sharing a common set of administration and application APIs with industrial "brown field" systems and the cloud.

Like Baidu, Flege's creator, Dianomic Systems, brought its project to LF Edge because the company believes both the program and the business will be the better for it.

Tom Arthur, Dianomic Systems' CEO and co-founder, stated: "The LF Edge's efforts for an open, interoperable framework for the edge is especially needed for the industrial factory, plant, and mine -- where almost every brown field system, piece of equipment, or sensor uses its own proprietary protocols and data definitions."

That all sounds well and good for edge computing users and companies, but why does Joshipura think that edge computing will overtake cloud computing? After all, Gartner estimatedthe total worth of the public cloud market in 2019 will be $214.3 billion, with a growth rate of 17.5%. For that, you need to take a close look at LF Edge's view of edge computing.

In it, the LF Edge sees industrial, enterprise and consumer use cases in complex environments spanning multiple edges and domains (a.k.a pretty much everywhere). Edge computing also has killer apps. These include video content delivery, autonomous vehicles' augmented and virtual reality, 5G, and gaming.

There are two reasons you haven't heard more about important edge computing is going to be. The first is that edge computing efforts have often been at cross-purposes. The LF Edge's primary reason for existence is to bring unity to edge computing. The other reason is that most of edge computing's killer apps aren't here yet.

The key word is "yet."

With more and more support for the LF Edge and its projects, and the rise of these new technologies Joshipura may yet be proven right. Stay tuned.

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Polish National Cloud works with Google for cloud computing – Warsaw Business Journal

Posted: at 9:45 am

National Cloud (Chmura Krajowa), an institution established by PKO BP and the Polish Development Fund, will include Google Cloud services in its portfolio and will sell them to clients, companies announced at a joint conference of Google Cloud, PKO BP, and PFR.

One of the main goals of the National Cloud is to provide entrepreneurs with various digital servicesadapted to the Polish market, an alternative to those provided by global suppliers. "Including Google Cloud services in the National Cloud offer will allow Polish entrepreneurs to use exactly the same advanced technologies that their global competitors do,"said Micha Potoczek, President of the Management Board of the National Cloud. He added that the technologies, however,will remain in Polish jurisdiction and under the control of local regulators.

In addition, Google said it will open a new cloud region, a technical infrastructure and software hub, in Warsaw.

(300gospodarka.pl)

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New Cybersecurity Companies Have Their Heads In The Cloud – Forbes

Posted: at 9:45 am

Privacy has become a big deal. Government regulators are moving to squash indiscretions and protect consumers while preserving constitutional liberties a tall task.

The Federal Trade Commission recently announced wide-ranging monetary settlements withFacebookandEquifaxto resolve ongoing investigations.

Facebook will pay $5 billion for its part in the Cambridge Analytica data scandal. State attorneys general asserted that lax standards at the social media giant allowed political operatives to weaponize fake news accounts and influence the 2016 presidential election.

Hacker internet computer crime cyber attack network security password protection

TheNew York Timesreportedthat Equifax, a leading consumer credit reporting agency, will pay $650 million to settle class-action lawsuits related to its data 2017 breach.

In a corporate video released following the attack, Equifax CEO Rick Smith said cybercriminals breached company databases between May and July 2017. They stole full names, social security numbers, birth dates, addresses and driver license numbers for 145 million persons. Credit card credentials were lifted for 209,000 customers.

Equifax collects and aggregates financial information on 800 million individuals and 88 million businesses worldwide. Its business is protecting data. The company employs an experienced staff of IT professionals, yet their defenses proved no match for the sophisticated attacks of cyber crooks.

Its a new world, and the bad guys are winning.

Its easy to get distracted by these headline-grabbing fines. But investors should pay attention. New competitive moats are forming around data security, and scale is more important than ever.

Analysts at Gartner, an information technology research company,predictedthat worldwide spending on cybersecurity would grow 8.7% in 2019, to $124 billion. The firm cited security breaches, business needs created by digital transformation and ongoing regulatory changes as growth drivers.

Hidden in that report is the surprising growth of cloud-delivered, Security-as-a-Service deployments. Analysts noted that although on-premises solutions are still the most popular, cloud-based security is becoming the preferred delivery model for a number of technologies.

During the past two months,Microsoft,IBM,Amazon.comandAlphabetall reported dramatic increases in their cloud computing infrastructure businesses.

The scale at which this can be done is the attraction. Enterprises have been able to build applications in the cloud, and then add computing power, storage and data analytics as needed.

Now theyre discovering this scalability is also possible with cybersecurity.

Chronicle, a Google Cloud cybersecurity business,launchedBackstory in March. The cloud service is a lot like Google Photos. Enterprises and organizations dump their data into silos. Then the system structures everything, stores the data in the cloud and compares it to a continuous stream of threats.

Like Photos, Backstory uses real-time machine learning and advanced data analytics. And because it is constantly improving, Chronicle managers claim it gives security professionals the tools to get a leg up against advanced, data-swiping antagonists.

Zscalerbuilds walls around data, not applications. The San Jose, Calif., company makes cloud-based, next generation firewalls.

The idea turns traditional network security on its head. Most enterprise security solutions have been built around security appliances, where threats are pushed to siloed servers. Unfortunately, that model is hopelessly broken.

More importantly, appliances have not stopped hackers. Plus, appliances are expensive and do not scale well. The only way to add more capacity is to buy more appliances. Unfortunately, that increases bottlenecks and latency. Its the anathema of the hybrid and cloud-based infrastructure that dominates modern enterprise computing.

Zscaler claims to operate the worlds largest Security-as-a-Service stack, processing 35 billion requests, with 125,000 unique security updates every day. And its cloud architecture means every client, from powerful workstations and laptops, to smartphones and tiny Internet of Things devices, get the same level of security.

When Zscaler finds a threat anywhere, it blocks it everywhere. In the process, customers get better performance and lower costs than security appliances.

I originally recommended the stock in June 2018 at $28, then again in January 2019, at $41. At the time I explained that although the stock might seem expensive at 520x forward earnings, the business was growing fast and at the center of a new digital security trend. Sharesreached $89, before falling back to $48.

For what its worth, the stock now trades at 174x forward earnings and 20x sales. Sales grew 59% in fiscal 2019. The stock is up 19% year to date.

Zscaler is still in the right place, with the right product.This pullback looks like an attractive entry point in a great longer term story.

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Best security practices for migrating to the cloud: A guide – Cloud Tech

Posted: at 9:45 am

As more businesses embark on their digital transformation journey and shift towards a mobile cloud computing model, they must rethink their entire security architecture. Migrating to the cloud effectively marks the end of the traditional network perimeter, which means that the standard security protocols designed to protect the perimeter are no longer fit for purpose.

A recent report from Outpost24 found that while 42 percent of organisations are concerned about cloud security, 27 percent do not know how quickly they could tell if their cloud data had been compromised. This shows that many organisations are failing to follow cloud security best practices, leaving them vulnerable to security threats. This article outlines some of the best security practice organisations should follow when migrating to the cloud.

The rising popularity of the cloud cannot be understated. IDGs 2018 Cloud Computing Study estimated that 77 percent of organisations use cloud services. Its also been estimated that the average enterprise uses up to almost 1,000 applications. However, the added freedom granted by cloud services also comes with risks. As organisations move to a mobile cloud computing model, their employees have access to critical business data anytime from anywhere, eroding the traditional network perimeter. This has opened up new access points for hackers to exploit and created a massive attack surface that traditional security systems, such as firewalls and gateways, cannot protect against.

With the modern mobile cloud computing model dissolving the traditional network perimeter, organisations need to adapt. Businesses should look to implement a zero-trust security framework, which has been designed in direct response to the diminishing perimeter. Zero-trust considers an organisations network to be already compromised and as a result applies a never trust, always verify logic to network access.

With data flowing freely between various devices and servers in the cloud, there are more potential access points to be exploited. The zero trust model takes this into account and requires the device to be verified, the users context to be established, the apps to be authorized, the network to be verified and the presence of threats to be detected and mitigated. Only after all these checks have been completed will the user be granted access to the data they are trying to view.

The password is the weakest link in enterprise security a recent survey conducted by MobileIron and IDG found that 90 percent of the security professionals questioned had seen unauthorised access attempts as a result of stolen credential and unfortunately, the advent of cloud computing has further exploited the vulnerability of the password. With cloud services and applications presenting organisations with multiple opportunities to streamline the way they handle their data, the risk presented by stolen user credentials has only grown.

The same IDG survey also found that almost half of enterprise users recycle their password for more than one enterprise application. And with the average enterprise using up to 1,000 different cloud applications, it is highly likely that enterprise users recycle their passwords for different cloud services. Thus, just one stolen password in the modern cloud environment could provide hackers with countless amounts of enterprise data. In order to overcome the pain of passwords, organisations should look to more reliable methods of securing access to their data in the cloud, such as multi-factor authentication, or biometrics.

Good security hygiene is always of paramount importance, but even more so when an organisation migrates to the cloud. The advancement of cloud computing has changed the way the modern enterprise works, with mobile devices increasingly being used to access critical business data. In order to best achieve secure access to cloud data, organisations need to understand the environment in which their employees want to work, including what devices they choose to use.

Organisations can then implement appropriate security protocols. With modern work increasingly taking place on applications on mobile devices, rather than on browsers or desktops, organisations will need to develop a new perimeter defined for the device in order to stop data seeping between cloud apps.

This is where enrolling devices in a unified endpoint management (UEM) solution becomes essential. Enrolling devices ensures that devices are encrypted and allows IT to enforce appropriate authentication and security policies. It also gives IT the opportunity to delete dangerous apps over-the-air and stop business data from seeping between different cloud-based apps. Enrolling devices in such a way not only serves to maximise the gains in productivity that cloud computing has to offer but also helps to ensure data stored in the cloud is secure.

Interested in hearing industry leaders discuss subjects like this and sharing their experiences and use-cases? Attend the Cyber Security & Cloud Expo World Series with upcoming events in Silicon Valley, London and Amsterdam to learn more.

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Best security practices for migrating to the cloud: A guide - Cloud Tech

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