Intelligent CIO LATAM Issue 08 | Page 45

CIO OPINION storage systems and uses WORM ( Write Once Read Many ) technology to make backup data copies immutable for a set time frame . Once backup data is written , it cannot be changed or deleted until the time is up , meaning hackers can ’ t encrypt the data and a clean copy is available for quick and easy restore if an attack occurs . Object Lock works the same onpremises , in a private cloud or in the public cloud .
How are we protecting data at-rest ? communications , looking for passwords or other information being transmitted in plaintext . CIOs must ensure data is secured in transit and in their storage system .
To protect your data from theft , it ’ s essential that it be encrypted on the storage device .
Data theft is increasingly common today . Hackers threaten to expose a company ’ s proprietary information unless a ransom is paid . To protect your data from theft , it ’ s essential that it be encrypted on the storage device . CIOs would be wise to deploy AES-256 encryption – the specification established by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology ( NIST ) – using a system-generated encryption key ( regular SSE ) or a customer-provided and managed encryption key ( SSE-C ). This allows the upload and download requests to be securely submitted using HTTPS , and the system does not store a copy of the encryption key .
How are we protecting in-flight data ?
It ’ s common for data to be breached through ‘ eavesdropping ’, where hackers ‘ listen ’ to data
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