In a recent press release from Gartner, ambiguous contract language and protection relating to security was highlighted as concern to buyers of commercial cloud services, particularly software as a service (SaaS). So what specifically are these concerns and what can the CIO do to mitigate them?
The Gartner report is supported by a survey conducted in June by Logicalis Australia. It found that, while CIOs acknowledge the benefits a cloud solution could present in terms of freeing up time to address strategy tasks, 70% of respondents cited data sovereignty as an issue. Price Waterhouse Coopers also found in a survey that 62% of respondents considered data security the biggest barrier to adoption.Clearly then the concerns are widespread, but what specifically is giving CIOs the jitters?
I believe there are six key concerns:
It is clear then that data sovereignty and business flexibility need to be balanced to ensure the business is not brought to a grinding halt. CIOs can achieve this by ensuring they select the right vendor and negotiate the right contract. Obvious, but not always executed as pressures from the business mount up on the IT department.
Advice is available from all quarters, and it is consistent; for example, in a market overview by Forrester in February this year and in advice documents published by The Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre of the University of New South Wales, it is suggested that in the first place a Cloud Service or SaaS provider’s background needs to be audited in terms of offering, financial position, infrastructure, data centre locations, security procedures, record of reliability, secure access maintenance, DR plans and insurance coverage.
At the contract stage Gartner suggests that: "...cloud services users need to ensure that SaaS contracts allow for an annual security audit and certification by a third party, with an option to terminate the agreement in the event of a security breach if the provider fails on any material measure. In addition, it is reasonable for cloud service buyers to ask a provider to respond to the findings of assessment tools" - such as those offered to members of the Cloud Security Alliance[i].
The key is risk mitigation, and the contract should address all the concerns highlighted above - to include managing sensitive data, storage location, access by other entities, breach notification obligation, disaster recovery, monitoring and termination. A provider should share not just its data centre migration process, but also its method for 'off-boarding' customers.
Any CIO will welcome the opportunity to apply more energy to strategic matters, and with a careful approach to negotiating contracts, should also be able enjoy the comfort of full data sovereignty.
[i] The Cloud Security Alliance is a non-profit industry organisation with members such as Cisco, Amazon, AT&T, Google and HP. https://cloudsecurityalliance.org/