Posts tagged cloud computing
When selling yourself as faster and cheaper is no longer enough: Part 2
Jan 18th
By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette
In Part 1, we introduced Host Analytics, an enterprise software vendor that delivers a suite of corporate performance management (CPM) tools through a software-as-a-service (SaaS) model. We discussed how the company initially positioned itself as a “faster and cheaper” alternative to established competitors such as Hyperion – a vendor later acquired by Oracle from which many of Host Analytics’ founders had come.
By the late 2000s, Host Analytics had come to realize that its initial value proposition no longer represented the firm’s true value and wasn’t supporting its position as an emerging market leader. It needed to rebrand and reposition itself and take advantage of the fact that SaaS had begun to go mainstream as a delivery model for many enterprise applications and had found greater acceptance among finance professionals. Read the rest of this entry »
When selling yourself as faster and cheaper is no longer enough: Part 1
Jan 16th
By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette
In the past two months, Oracle has agreed to purchase RightNow Technologies for $1.4 billion, SAP has taken SuccessFactors for $3.4 billion, and IBM is buying DemandTec for $440 million.
What do all three of these deals have in common? An established enterprise technology vendor is buying a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) vendor to broaden its own product portfolio and bolster sagging sales.
SaaS is one form of cloud computing. More and more, businesses and institutions are turning to cloud computing as a way to manage massive stores of data while at the same time reducing their computer hardware and software costs. In the SaaS model, a software application and its data is kept on the service provider’s central server. Users access the application and their data over the Internet using a secure login.
SaaS has become a common delivery model for most business applications, including accounting, collaboration, customer relationship management and enterprise resource planning. Enterprise cloud services, including SaaS, are expected to generate $22.3 billion in revenue worldwide in 2014 and to have experienced a compound annual growth rate of 30 percent between 2010 and 2014. Read the rest of this entry »
3 awesome security tips for 2012
Jan 3rd
by Claudiu Popa
Everything I’m reading these days indicates that hacking and malware infections are going to increase in 2012. I don’t need to provide references here because everything you’re reading does too. Yet all the software you need to secure computers, both corporate and personal, is available for free. There’s everything from scanning and blocking to diagnosing and disinfecting the computing devices you depend on.
So how come we’re poised for continued growth in data theft and general cyber-mischief?
In short, you’re the weakest link. If it weren’t for you, your computer would have a much higher chance of leading an infection-free existence, gracefully growing old and slowly descending into obsolescence. Instead, you may hear yourself thinking out loud: “it was fast at the beginning, but now it’s so slow I’m thinking of getting a new one”. This platform-independent mantra is no doubt very depressing for laptops and smartphones to overhear and even the shiny new tablets, smug in their reliance on a firmware-based operating system, aren’t too far behind.
What are your options? Panic? Trade in your new tablet for a stone tablet? Pester the one social recluse in your family with open-ended questions?
The latter is always a good idea (although you can’t go wrong with the first two either). Make sure you corner him (it’s always a ‘he’) at the family party this holiday season and don’t let him take another sip of the eggnog until he makes an effort to put his answers into plain English. Pull up a chair, make him feel special, for once!
In the failing case, here are three (because no one can really retain more than that anyway) tips for you to better understand computing security in general, and in particular over the next few months, as the reliance on technical attacks on all platforms (not just on mobile devices, PCs, or ‘in the cloud’) gives way to plain old abuses of trust). At the very least, you’ll sound smarter about this stuff, so here’s some sage advice:
1. Sometimes things that increase convenience may increase your security risk
Just one example: URL shorteners. These handy little tools (aside from the fact that they build clickthrough statistics) may send you to malicious destinations and may contribute to the security problems that plague social networking sites. So click wisely.
2. Sometimes it’s better to focus on the things that go out of your computer
We’re on the Internet for a reason: to explore and access information. Each click is a request, an a consensual invitation, an implied permission and an open door to receiving information. So when that response happens to be malicious, it’s difficult to see exactly what it’s doing inside your computer, but it’s relatively easy to block unauthorized software from ‘calling home’ and initiating outbound connections of its own. So look for personal firewalls with egress filtering and be cautious about approving connection requests.
3. Sometimes things that protect your privacy may decrease your security
You know that little ‘lock’ icon everyone tells you to look for when completing online purchases? And the ‘secure tunnel’ your IT guy tells you about when installing your remote access VPN into the office (so you can be ‘productive‘ from home, naturally)? Those are great things. They protect the confidentiality of the data that you exchange with the big bad Internet, and also serve to protect your privacy. But they also make it next to impossible for security tools to inspect data traffic, see malicious code and the details of hacking attacks as they come and go. So use with caution, and appreciate that once encrypted, both good and bad data is protected from prying eyes (and be sure to have a memory resident scanner to detect the latter just before or immediately after scrambling).
Enjoy 2012 and if you know someone who could use the information, don’t hesitate to suggest this blog.
Clouds of confusion
Nov 30th
by Elaine Mah
About a year ago, I wrote about cloud computing and how small businesses see the benefits of cloud but struggle with how to capitalize on those advantages.
While I don’t think you can turn on the TV, flip through a magazine or read a business journal without seeing something about “the cloud”, earlier this year Eweek* surveyed small businesses in the US and found 71 per cent of respondents hadn’t even heard of cloud computing. Of those that had heard of the cloud, only 26 per cent could actually define it. These numbers surprised me and I don’t think you can ignore them.
At Intel we define cloud computing as services and data residing as shared resources accessible by any authenticated device over the Internet. An easy analogy is to think of these shared resources such as software and information being provided to computers, tablets and smartphones, as a utility, like electricity.
For most small businesses, cloud services tend to be software-based such as customer relationship management tools (CRM) and programs that automate business processes like inventory control and sales forecasting. Read the rest of this entry »
Tech jobs that cloud computing will create
Oct 27th
by Bernard Golden
I was interested in this week’s ZDNet piece, Cloud computing’s real creative destruction may be the IT workforce.
The piece discusses a presentation at last week’s Gartner Symposium that posited cloud computing will be a net destructor of IT jobs.![]()
Privacy concerns with Google +
Sep 1st
Back on Day 15 I examined Google+ privacy and found a couple things that seemed to be suspicious or give me some reason for concern.
I spoke with someone at Google, though, to clear up a few things about Google+ privacy, so for today’s 30 Days With Google+ post I want to clarify my understanding of Google+ privacy.
There are two main concerns I had regarding Google+ privacy–granting permissions in Google+ Games, and the broad scope of the terms of service (ToS) required just to use Google+. Read the rest of this entry »
5 tips for secure cloud computing
Aug 30th
By David Ridout
Risks of the cloud have recently become an issue with well-publicized failures in popular public cloud services. 
Organizations are thus under more pressure than ever to evaluate their management solutions, including those focused on security and how they are deployed as they get onto the cloud. Here are five general tips for companies getting on the cloud: Read the rest of this entry »
Online dispute resolution saves firms time and money
Jul 28th
A thought on cloud security…
Jun 22nd
By Brian Bourne
There have been no shortage of Cloud service failures recently. The latest being discussed in this ITBusiness article: “Dropbox drops the ball on account security”.
So this raises the question. How scared should the average business owner be about moving to the cloud? Of course it’s a complex question. If you look at it completely academically, you’ll need to value assets, calculate risk and all the rest. But let’s cover a few practicalities here.
It’s very common for small businesses (and some large ones) to have an attacker inside their systems for months if not years before anyone notices. When they do notice, there is seldom a competent forensic investigation to determine what has happened and for how long. Actually, what usually happens when there is a security incident is the sysadmin or IT provider does his/her best to patch it up and move on. So would you rather have someone directly inside your systems, or just have a bit of your data in a large pile of other data that a random person may or may not ever go through or use against you? Read the rest of this entry »
Growing mobile workforce, cloud computing bring new security threats
May 5th
By Paul Wood
The traditional office is turning into an untethered workspace that can be located just about anywhere and operate at anytime. With instant accessibility to faster, wireless networks and collaboration tools like instant messaging (IM), working remotely is growing in popularity among businesses around the world. An IDC study estimated that the worldwide mobile worker population will grow from 919.4 million in 2008, accounting for 29 per cent of the worldwide workforce, to 1.19 billion in 2013, accounting for 34.9 per cent of the workforce. An increase in the mobile worker population means one thing for IT professionals – an increase in security threats. In fact, recent analysis by Symantec.cloud found that remote workers are more likely to exhibit potentially harmful web browsing activity compared to office-based workers. Read the rest of this entry »







