Says CISOs must take steps to protect data that is expanding in volume, variety and velocity
Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) should not treat big data security in isolation, but require policies that encompass all data silos if they are to avoid security chaos, according to Gartner, Inc.
Gartner predicts that, through 2016, more than 80 percent of organizations will fail to develop a consolidated data security policy across silos, leading to potential noncompliance, security breaches and financial liabilities.
“Businesses have traditionally managed data within structured and unstructured silos, driven by inherent requirements to deploy relational database management systems, file storage systems and unstructured file shares,” said Brian Lowans, principal research analyst at Gartner. “However, the advent of big data and cloud storage environments is transforming the way in which data is stored, accessed and processed, and CISOs need to develop a data-centric security approach. Unfortunately this is not common practice today, and its planning is critical to avoid uncoordinated data security policies and management.”
CISOs need to collaborate with trusted team members to develop and manage an enterprise data security policy that defines data residency requirements, stakeholder responsibilities, business needs, risk appetite, data process needs and security controls.
“Although the ability to apply a data security governance policy across data silos is also becoming paramount, the market has so far failed to offer CISOs the data-centric audit and protection (DCAP) products they need to operate across all silos with consistency,” said Earl Perkins, research vice president at Gartner. “Instead, the use of different tools for each silo is complicating the implementation of any businesswide data security plans due to different functionalities, network architectures and data repositories.”
Access to public cloud services and infrastructure further complicates this process due to the potential access by cloud service providers and security vendors. Data flows will inevitably result in a growing need to monitor and audit access, and to protect data across silos.