news

Special Report: How Fragile is the Cloud, Really?

Spread the love

A severe cloud infrastructure outage often feels less like a service disruption and more like an earthquake. One incident can barrel its way across an entire region, indiscriminately disrupting commerce, travel, medical care, and communication. Reverberations are felt far, far from the site of the event. There’s nothing most of us can do to prevent it from happening or stop it once it starts. We just have to wait for the shaking to end and hope that none of our most valuable stuff got smashed.

The cloud is quickly becoming as foundational to life on earth as the ground beneath our feet. AWS, Microsoft Azure, IBM Cloud, Google Cloud, Oracle Cloud, the cloud delivery networks like Fastly are an essential part of more businesses and industries every day, whether those businesses know it or not. 

And that’s not such a bad thing. Cloud computing does enable extraordinary innovations.

Yet the companies running cloud services and maintaining cloud infrastructure have the same challenges all IT teams do: People are fallible. Market pressures rush release cycles. Legacy systems hold on with an iron fist. Networks are insufficiently segmented. Credential management is lackluster. Misconfigurations happen. Updates are risky. Regulatory compliance is a headache. Automation can’t solve every problem. And 99.99% uptime sounds good until the .01% event happens.  

But the consequences when something goes wrong, the impact of those .01% incidents, are far far worse. When shipping, finance, medical care, government all rely on the same infrastructure to conduct basic operations, and that infrastructure is disrupted for hours…

Well, it’s worth devoting a whole week of coverage to. So, that’s what we’re digging into at InformationWeek and Network Computing this week. Here’s what we’ve covered so far, and what’s coming up next:

Lessons Learned from Recent Major Outages, Today’s more interconnected business world makes infrastructure and cloud outages all the more impactful. Here’s a recap of recent outages and their root causes.

Cyber Resiliency: How CIOs Can Prepare for a Cloud Outage, The dangers posed

Emerging Tech to Help Guard Against the Malevolence of Cloud Outages, Reality Check: Why Your Cloud Provider Won’t Be Providing Multi-Cloud Failover, Your IT organization may view failing over from one hyperscaler’s cloud to another as the ultimate security when it comes to cloud resiliency. Here’s why that’s not going to happen, plus a look at alternatives.

Legislators Gear Up to Regulate Cloud Providers for Resilience, The US, UK, and EU are all weighing regulations that would consider cloud companies “critical infrastructure” and require they meet resiliency standards.

Are Cloud Outages the Result of Choosing Price Over Reliability?, Market pressures and risk tradeoffs made You Get What You Pay For: Cloud Edition,

174919_IWK22_Graphics_cloud.jpg174919_IWK22_Graphics_cloud.jpg

Click image to download the complete 2022 State of Network Management Report.


COMING THIS WEEK:

Can You Recover Losses Sustained During a Cloud Outage? By Richard Pallardy and Carrie Pallardy

The cloud comes with tantalizing promises of greater efficiency, improved data security, and boosted profits. But the cloud is not infallible, and outages are inevitable. Here’s what IT leaders need to know.

When (and If) to Sue Your Cloud Provider, Taking legal action is a slippery slope: Cloud providers are known to have covered their bases well. And besides, is it worth ruining your relationship with the cloud provider? It depends.

[Sign up for the InformationWeek Cloud biweekly newsletter, your source of insight on the fast-changing world of cloud technology, and how to use it to transform IT and business.]

What Can Network Managers Do About Cloud Outages? (Not Much), Better observability tools can help net managers maintain some cyber resilience to cloud service outages, but misconfigs and DNS infrastructure is down to the providers.

How Climate Change is Impacting Cloud Resilience, Datacenter cooling issues are already causing problems for cloud providers. What does a future full of droughts, heat waves, and severe weather events mean for cloud resiliency?

15 Years of Cloud Outages: A Look Back at the InformationWeek Archives

Remember 2008, when “Low” Workspot CEO on Coping with Cloud Outages, by Joao-Pierre Ruth