Over the last 18 months the cloud has gone mainstream. In case you need proof, Gartner forecasts end-user spending on public cloud services to grow 23.1% in 2021 to total $332.3 billion, up from $270 billion in 2020. However, as more organizations move mission-critical workloads to the cloud and scale to meet the demands of a hybrid workforce model, more cloud services and applications inherently increase the attack surface. A study by McAfee found almost 3.1 million external attacks on cloud user accounts throughout 2020.
As the opportunity for attackers to get access to sensitive data is expanding, how do we minimize that and limit exposure if attackers get into these cloud environments? To keep things simple, in this blog we’ll focus on Amazon Web Services (AWS), the leader in the cloud infrastructure services market, and solutions and best practices available to strengthen protection.
When the public cloud emerged, it reimagined how we would deploy applications and infrastructure and forced us to rethink security for this highly dynamic environment. Cloud-native security solutions, such as security groups and network access control lists (NACLs), offer an immediate level of protection at no cost and with nothing to deploy. For example, you can use security groups to restrict traffic based on IP addresses. You can quickly and easily microsegment the environment and secure east-west traffic to restrict lateral movement once an adversary is inside. And these security solutions will scale to the size of your environment transparently; policies you define will always be enforced without performance degradation.
Sounds like you’re done, right? Not so fast.
One reason AWS is so popular is because of the many different services offered for consumption – currently 285 and growing approximately 30 per year. Some of those services create more attack surface. So, with the right credentials combined with loose security policies and a growing list of interconnected services, an attacker has many avenues to take advantage of. A seemingly endless perimeter in the public cloud not only exposes platform services to the internet, but also the control plane for the cloud itself.
So, what is the implication? The network perimeter from the pre-cloud era, is now just one of many. As enterprises move to the cloud they must protect four additional perimeters, because one successful penetration on the right resource can lead to a major incident. In fact, the security industry has many examples of damage that can be done in a mere 60 seconds or less.
Cloud-native security tools are crucial. But these five best practices are also important to reduce the attack surface in the cloud.
Security takes concerted effort and some newcomers to the public cloud can find it daunting. But putting in the work upfront is well worth it. To learn more about how the attack surface in the cloud is expanding and how to mitigate risk, I encourage you to watch this webinar.