Do you understand public cloud shared responsibility concepts well enough to stay out of the cloud failure trap? Take two minutes to try our brief quiz and find out.
Your public cloud provider allows you to block IPs and ports. Is your personally identifiable information (PII) and other sensitive information adequately protected?
You’re on an Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) platform. The cloud provider is going to take care of keeping the OS security patches up-to-date. Right?
Your credentials to your cloud provider have been compromised. Is your cloud provider responsible for detecting suspicious activity within your accounts and for resolving this situation?
You’re storing sensitive data in the cloud and just discovered that some of it is publicly accessible. Is the cloud provider responsible for notifying you?
One of your users has been making a number of changes to the security settings for your infrastructure in the public cloud. Both the frequency of requests and the types of changes are unusual. Who is responsible for investigating this behavior?