| By Dan Pepper | Article Rating: |
|
| March 11, 2013 08:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
2,466 |
A number of studies I’ve recently read indicate that more enterprises will use cloud services in 2013 than ever before. This fact is not lost on many of my software vendor clients, who are transitioning many of their on-premises products into cloud-based offerings.
The problem many of these vendors are facing is the inability to address data privacy and security demands placed upon them by their customers due to the weak contractual protections offered by the vendor’s hosting providers. As a result, the time and cost savings expected by leveraging the cloud model are lost by extended contract negotiations between the vendor, customer, and hosting provider.
Here is a typical example:
- Software vendor wishes to offer its cloud-based service to a financial services company.
- The financial services company sends the software vendor its detailed requirements for information security controls, data privacy, breach detection and response, security program details and systems, disaster recovery, encryption, physical security, and data destruction and certification.
- Software vendor reviews the contract with its hosting provider to determine whether the financial services company’s security requirements can be met.
- Software vendor discovers that its hosting provider only commits to something like “we will implement reasonable and appropriate measures designed to help you secure your content against accidental or unlawful loss, access or disclosure.” (See, for example, Amazon’s Web Services Agreement, Section 3.1.)
- Panic ensues.
Generally, at this point the software vendor is left with a couple of options: One, attempt to renegotiate its hosting provider contract to incorporate the voluminous information security controls demanded by its financial services company customer, or two, convince the financial services company to drop its demands and accept language similar to Amazon’s above. You can guess how well each of these options will work out.
So what is a software vendor to do?
Before accepting a hosting provider’s contract, know your target customer base. Are your customers regulated by laws like Gramm-Leach-Bliley or HIPAA? Is your service likely going to be storing sensitive information of your customers? If the answer to these or similar questions is yes, then selecting a hosting provider willing to accommodate and contractually commit to specific data security protocols is paramount. Many enterprise users are feeling both internal and external pressure to shave costs and move certain services and data into the cloud – even if doing so creates heightened risks and liabilities. But simply explaining to these users that “our hosting provider doesn’t provide these assurances” usually won’t cut it.
In my next post, I’ll discuss certain tactics software vendors can use with their hosting providers to create more robust and meaningful protections for them, and their customers.
Published March 11, 2013 Reads 2,466
Copyright © 2013 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Dan Pepper
Dan Pepper is the managing member of Pepper Law Group, LLC, a boutique technology law firm, and has spent nearly 20 years in the information technology law field, including acting as in-house counsel for Oracle Corporation. He presents at conferences worldwide on the legal risks associated with cloud computing.
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Is Changing the Economics of Business
- New Relic Q1 2013 Blazes Past Growth Targets and Reaches 40,000 Active Customer Accounts
- How Can Green Web Hosting Benefit Your Business?
- Big Data Isn’t About the Database, It’s About the Application
- Cloud Expo New York: Rethink IT and Reinvent Business with IBM SmartCloud
- Cloud Expo New York: API Security, Does My Business Need an OAuth Server?
- Cloud Expo New York: Developing the World’s First IaaS Marketplace
- Cloud Expo NY: Best Practices for Delivering Oracle Database as a Service
- UNIT4 Business Software: Three Retail Accounting Tips to Help Retailers Leverage the Cloud and Back Office Systems
- Cloud Expo New York: Aligning Your Cloud Security with the Business
- Cloud Expo NY: Best Practices for Architecting Your Cloud Infrastructure
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Is Changing the Economics of Business
- AMD and Adobe Collaborate on Upcoming Version of Adobe Premiere Pro Software to Enable Breakthrough Video Editing Performance Through Open Standards
- Enterasys Spotlights SDN's Impact on Traditional Networking in Upcoming Webinar
- New Relic Q1 2013 Blazes Past Growth Targets and Reaches 40,000 Active Customer Accounts
- State and Local Governments Adopt Microsoft Dynamics CRM to Improve Citizen Service Delivery
- How Can Green Web Hosting Benefit Your Business?
- Cloud Expo New York: Deploying Hybrid Cloud for Performance and Uptime
- Big Data Isn’t About the Database, It’s About the Application
- Cloud Expo New York: Delivering Digital Marketing on the Cloud
- Cloud Expo New York: Rethink IT and Reinvent Business with IBM SmartCloud
- Gravitant Supports General Dynamics Information Technology in Offering New Cloud Brokerage Services to Government Entities
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- Six Benefits of Cloud Computing
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- FullArmor GPAnywhere Secures Microsoft Application Virtualization Applications Through Group Policy
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Conference & Expo: Themes & Topics
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Journal Opens Its "Readers' Choice Awards" Nominations
- "Virtualization Is Now a Key Strategic Theme," Says Citrix CTO
- Application Virtualization: Instant Migration to Vista, Fast Delivery, Secure Access, Side-by-Side Deployments
- Application Virtualization
- Integration with Windows Vista, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft Application Virtualization
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- What's the Difference Between Cloud Computing and SaaS?























