Evelyn de Souza
Senior Manager Datacenter Solution Marketing Based in Santa Clara, Calif. Evelyn is responsible for ...
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At the Uptime Conference this year I was struck by the absence of security as a process in the many innovative technological innovations that are expected to transform the design and operation of data centers. Choices made in designing complicated architectures that don’t involve elements of security could lead to unplanned outages and violations of SLAs. And, surely recent events have taught us that a secure and robust datacenter is needed to ensure both business continuity and business agility.
As we see more unified computing infrastructures – whether in the form of modules, containers or pods it will be interesting to see how security and infrastructure interrelate. In most mission-critical environments, customers are bound to provide highly available infrastructures to ensure that their Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are met. Service outages are most often attributed to unplanned or unwanted change or a security breach, highlighting the ongoing need for an integrated data center operations plan that spans information security, hardware availability, redundancy and disaster recover with business continuity. A key part of information security will be ensuring continual integrity of the data center infrastructure and its assets as well as having a strong change management plan.
Finally, understanding and testing the scalability and performance impact of security services and software should give data center operations and security teams vital insight into systems (servers storage and other devices) and network planning, allowing for more efficiently managed systems and increased uptime and availability.
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Tags: cloud security, data center, data center security, enterprise, Mid-Market, Network Security, network security server security