Google: Cloud Apps Are MORE Secure, Not Less

This problem goes away in the cloud, he says, “because you have no more servers to patch,” a statement that seems to assume there is no need to patch PCs either. Google will patch servers better than you can, he said: “We built security in from the get-go.” Other companies have troubles because of the variety of their systems, he says, but “all our servers are alike. We can patch all our servers in a very rapid and uniform manner.”

Multiple data centres means the service is more reliable, he said, and Google has zero scheduled downtime.

With attacks becoming more serious and business-like, we’ve entered an age of “hacking as a service,” he says. The sheer scale is beyond smaller companies. “We’re processing about two billion email transactions a day,” he said. “We can block botnet attacks, viruses and spam, in the cloud, before they come to our clients’ networks, because of the sheer volume of traffic that we process.” Google finds and blocks viruses, hours before the anti-virus vendors know about them, he claimed.

Individuals who want to handle spam and malware themselves have to either have a lot of processing cycles spare, ready for big attack spikes, or operate at an efficient level, and then find they don’t have the capacity, he warned: “Going into the cloud, you are in a multi-tenant environment where there is lots of capacity you can trade.”

Changing the mindset

The majority of data centre managers wouldn’t agree with what Feigenbaum says, however. He agrees it’s a paradigm shift, and sees his task as changing their minds, so they accept their data isn’t as secure as they thought, and take it form their data centres and put it with “someone else who has the economy of scale and the expertise to make it secure.”

How easy is this? Well, he likens it to the change more than a hundred years ago, when people stopped keeping money themselves, and put it in the banks, where security is better. It’s not the best analogy at this moment, we pointed out to him.

“Most CISOs today have realised they don’t have as much control as they thought,” he said. “They don’t know what their email admins are doing. They don’t know which of their machines are susceptible to which security vulnerabilities, they don’t know who has access to the centre.” Security is simply too hard in a traditional environment, it seems.

Access to a Google Docs file can be altered and revoked at a later date, and is inherently more secure than sending someone an attachment, he argued. Businesses taking Google Apps pay $50 per user per year for the premium version, with an extra $12 per year, if they want email archiving and compliance support.

About 1.75 million businesses use Google Apps, said Feigenbaum, and around 3000 new ones start each week. But he refused to say how many of those are just trying it out. High profile companies such as the Daily Telegraph and the Guardian have thrown out Microsoft Exchange, but the majority are probably just testing the concept.

Next: Google and authentication

Page: 1 2

Peter Judge

Peter Judge has been involved with tech B2B publishing in the UK for many years, working at Ziff-Davis, ZDNet, IDG and Reed. His main interests are networking security, mobility and cloud

View Comments

  • does not this sound like the days of terminal/mainframe computing where the data and applications that existed on the company mainframe were accesses via lightweight terminals. Then, as computers became so affordable people wanted them in the home, in the car, in their pockets and as they became 'thinner' clients we started to put our data on the cloud. This is all well for accessing and manipulating corporate data, each with its own cloud, but I think that 100 million plus users pouring personal data into a single cloud is a bit scary. poop and pee is what goes in the toilet.

  • Someone told me after reading this article that your data is always safer in the confines of your own basement than out in the cloud. My response:

    Your data is only safer locked up in your basement until the basement floods. As long as you are responsible for the back-up, encryption, business continuance and disaster recovery plans (don't forget updating, administering, testing these plans and all the infrastructure involved in delivery of these services) than I have to agree with you that IN is safer than OUT. However, few organizations (even huge non-IT companies) have the resources to perform all I have explained above (and that's pointed out in the article). If they have the resources, they are hard pressed to perform better at a lower cost.

    If you run a no-risk accepted business (like the military) then keeping your data inside is for you. However, every business runs with some level of acceptable risk and the cloud is just that, an acceptable minimal risk compared to keeping it all inside.

Recent Posts

Trump Says China Tariffs May Be Cut To Seal TikTok Deal

President touts easing Chinese tariffs to facilitate TikTok sale, and also implements 25 percent tariff…

1 day ago

Newspaper Lawsuit Against OpenAI Can Proceed Says Judge

Copyright lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft from The New York Times and other newspapers can…

1 day ago

Napster Sold And Will Return As Interactive Streaming Service

New chapter for famous name from Internet's early days, Napster, has been acquired and will…

2 days ago

UK Proposes To Allow Satellites To Resolve UK Mobile Not-Spots

Solving not-spots? Ofcom proposal to make UK the first European country to allow ordinary smartphones…

2 days ago

Waymo Confirms Washington DC Robotaxi Plan For 2026

Pioneering robotaxi service from Alphabet's Waymo to go live in Washington DC next year, as…

2 days ago

US Adds 50 Chinese Firms To AI, Chip Blacklist

Dozens of Chinese firms added to US export blacklist, in order to hamper Beijing's AI…

2 days ago