Cloud computing cyberattacks don’t play out like the scenes from Hollywood thrillers. No one is slowly lowering Tom Cruise into a preselected target’s secure data center equipped with ultrasensitive noise, temperature and motion detectors so he can steal a specific file.
As someone who has spent a long time in network and endpoint security and then moved to cloud security, I can sympathize with people with security backgrounds who want to learn more about the cloud and cloud security concepts. AWS, EC2, CMK, KMS, IAM, SQS, etc.? It can seem like a big alphabet soup of unfamiliar acronyms. And lots of questions come up. How can I know whether a cloud provider encrypts a service by default or if I must specify it? What is the difference between a queue and a topic? Does CMK stand for customer-managed key or customer master key?
In order for business leaders and cybersecurity professionals to gain the knowledge they need to thwart the hackers constantly targeting their cloud infrastructure and applications, they need to think like General George S. Patton (or rather like George C. Scott, the actor who won the Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of the general in the 1970 film “Patton”).
Ask security professionals to name the biggest threat to their organizations’ cloud environments, and most won’t hesitate to give a one-word answer: misconfigurations. Technically, they’re not incorrect, yet they’re defining “misconfiguration” much too narrowly. They’re likely thinking of an Amazon S3 bucket that’s left exposed or a misconfigured security group rule. While identifying and remediating misconfigurations must be a priority, it’s important to understand that misconfigurations are but one means to the ultimate end for attackers: control plane compromise, which has played a central role in every major cloud breach to date.
One of Fugue's most powerful features is the ability to run custom rules against cloud infrastructure or infrastructure as code (IaC). This allows you to enforce enterprise policies such as tagging requirements, security measures, or other internal best practices.
Here at Fugue, we think it's important to practice what we preach. To that end, we're dogfooding Fugue! That means we use our own product to evaluate the compliance and security of our own running cloud infrastructure and infrastructure as code (IaC) with the same policies. In this blog post, we'll dive into how we set up a CI/CD pipeline that uses Fugue to scan the IaC underlying Fugue.
Ransomware made news headlines worldwide earlier this month after asuccessful attack against one of Toyota Motor Corp.’s parts suppliers forced the automaker to shut down 14 factories in Japan for a day, halting their combined output of around 13,000 vehicles.
Fugue recently achieved Amazon Web Services (AWS) Security Competency status. Our customers, including Red Ventures, Ericsson, and Wabtec use Fugue to establish cloud security visibility and policy-based governance across the software development life cycle. Attaining this designation from AWS recognizes that Fugue demonstrates proven technology that helps customers achieve their cloud security goals.
Today we announced that Fugue has been acquired by Snyk, the leader in developer-first security. This marks Snyk’s entry into the fast-growing cloud security market, and I want to share why I’m so excited about joining with them to build the future of security.