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However, from a data protection

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2025 4:16 am
by rakhirhif8963
One area where cloud providers have closed the gap with on-premises technologies is security and compliance.

Cloud providers have invested heavily in security over the past decade. Their size and scale allow them to attract skilled professionals and deploy the best security technologies. Cloud providers cannot afford to be victims of cyberattacks, and their security measures are now on par or superior to those of all but the most security-conscious users.

QAnd compliance perspective, moving to the cloud still has drawbacks.

While cloud providers provide fault tolerance and high availability, this applies to the infrastructure as a whole. They provide less or no file-level protection for customer data, so companies still need to invest in backup, recovery, and on-premises data protection.

Customers also need to consider where their data is stored. Geopolitical events, as well as legislation and regulation, have made data sovereignty a major issue, and not just in industries like china mobile database or banking. While hyperscalers have responded to this issue, there are some applications that find it easier to store data locally, at least for now.

How to align business strategy and cloud usage?
The biggest potential downside to the cloud is not technical at all. It is that organizations fail to align their use of the cloud with their business goals. This can cause or exacerbate the financial, governance, operational, and security weaknesses of cloud deployments.

It's not that the cloud is a bad solution, but it's often used for the wrong business purposes and doesn't take full advantage of cloud technologies.

“Organizations are looking at cloud as a way to digitally transform,” Collins says. “That can’t be true without business strategy. For cloud to be a solution, it has to be adopted strategically, which means understanding and engaging the business.”