News

IT Leaders struggle with HCI security; but confident it can transform ‘Flexibility’

Only 15% of IT Decision Makers (ITDM) report having HCI as part of their infrastructure, citing complex infrastructure and maintaining security as concerns about its future use in their organization

New research from WinMagic, the data security company, surveying over 1,000 IT Decision Makers (ITDM) about Hyper-Converged Infrastructure (HCI) has revealed flexibility (65%) performance (58%) and availability (46%) as the highest ranked benefits of the technology.  However, the survey also highlighted ITDM concerns around expanding their use of HCI, with complexity leading at 45% and security a close second (43%).

Currently, only 15% of respondents’ report having any HCI technology in their infrastructure. Yet the HCI market is expected to expand, with Gartner stating that “By 2021, Hyper-Converged integrated systems (HCIS) will represent 54% of total converged infrastructure shipments by revenue, with HCIS reaching $10.8 billion.” (Hype Cycle for Storage Technologies, July 2017).

ITDMs are clearly seeing the benefits of HCI technology, so what is holding them back from using it more?

Simplicity can make some things harder

Deployed with the correct controls HCI can be one of the best ways to simplify data center infrastructure. However, its dynamic nature and reliance on virtual machines, creates challenges such as how to unify security and control data sprawl as IT departments struggle to maintain control as workloads expand.

ITDMs highlighted four areas making them reluctant to include HCI as part of their future infrastructure plans:

  • Increased complexity of IT infrastructure (45%)
  • Maintaining security across HCI environments (43%)
  • Maintaining management control as HCI scales across the business (39%)
  • Lack of an ability to manage virtual machines in hybrid environments (34%)

Security shortcuts creating risks

A quarter (27%) of respondents admitted to not limiting access to the control planes of their Hyper-Converged Infrastructure. Rather than encrypting individual workloads, many are simply encrypting the whole platform, ignoring the need for encryption and access controls to certain sensitive datasets. The result is that unfettered access may be given to workloads that should be geo- or time restricted, leaving a company at risk of breaking its governance, regulatory and compliance obligations.

In addition, there were other areas of concern relating to security when using HCIs, such as:

  • Having a security solution that scales with our needs (29%)
  • Ensuring compatibility with any type of hypervisor technology (23%)
  • Maintaining identity access management and authentication (22%)

“Hyper-Converged Infrastructure offers a wide range of benefits for IT departments and they want to embrace the technology, but often the security and management concerns make it feel like a risky investment,” said Mark Hickman, Chief Operating Officer at WinMagic. “The truth is the benefits can be easily realized by IT teams, if a unified approach is taken to security and management, through a single tool where they are dependent, not separate tasks.  In reality this approach should extend beyond the hyperconverged hardware to the whole infrastructure whether on premises or in the cloud.  WinMagic SecureDoc Enterprise offers 100% encryption of endpoints, data center and cloud workloads with a single platform, meaning data is protected across the enterprise while IT leaders are free to deliver the enormous benefits of hyperconvergence.”

Related posts

December Issue 2024

enterpriseitworld

Team Computers and Apple Collaborate to Empower GCCs with Smarter Workplace Solutions

enterpriseitworld

Ajay Ajmera Joins Group CIO at Rockman Industries 

enterpriseitworld
x