Thursday, 31 May 2018

Data Storage: From Then to Now & What’s Still Needed Ahead


- Becca Bauer

Data storage has in fact been around for hundreds of years and has gone through a number of changes before arriving at the cloud storage era we have currently arrived at. Starting in the 1720’s, punch cards were introduced and eventually became the first tool for data storage and recording. Since then data storage has gone through a radical evolution including the introduction of magnetic tape and then the first hard drive invented by IBM in 1956. This was followed some 20-30 years later by the introduction of floppy disks, CD-ROM and DVDs. Next, the USB flash drive arrived on the scene in 2000 and dominated storage from several years until cloud storage entered the market and was debuted by Amazon Web Services in the early 2000s and took a major hold in 2006. Since then, the use of the Cloud has become increasingly popular for data storage and brings us to the present-day climate.

While there are many clear benefits to moving the Cloud, there are also several flaws revealing themselves that indicate the storage market is in need of a continued evolution. For example, recent studies are indicating that moving storage from in-house to the Cloud won’t achieve cost savings unless the storage needs are fully assessed, and anticipated savings are planned out. In fact, over-estimating storage capacity is one area that can make a dent in the savings. While estimating a higher capacity can secure better cloud storage rates from vendors, if you don’t have enough data to meet this higher capacity, you are essentially paying for unnecessary and wasted space.

Another major challenge to the current cloud data storage model is data security. Most organizations turning to cloud storage solutions hold a mix of data that often includes sensitive and protected personal information in their databases that they have a responsibility to keep protected, such as PHI (Protected Health Information), PII (Personally Identifiable Information) and GDPR (Global Data Protection Regulation). Unfortunately, current database systems can encrypt stored data, but this encryption is carried out in a way that anyone (human or machine) that has access to the system at any administration level generally also has access to the plain unencrypted data. This design flaw leaves a “come get me” sign that has led to many diverse organizations becoming victims to data theft and losing millions of dollars.

So now that we have highlighted what is missing from the current cloud storage systems, what is the solution?

Enter BOHH Labs introducing the next phase of data storage, Secure Data as a Service (SDaaS) that puts a focus on both the actual security of the data and removes wasted spend with a storage consumption model. SDaaS acts as a layer between the user/application and the back-end data store and enables total security on all your stored data, without changing the data structure, while making certain data points visible only to those with the correct permissions. Whether this is in a database or a document, the BOHH SDaaS enables full use of data without the security concerns. This solution uniquely offers database or specific field level security that businesses desperately need. All data that needs to be secured is removed from the source, encrypting it and storing it separately without changing the structure, enabling prioritization and control over sensitive data such as PHI, PII or GDPR. We do this because it stops the inside hacking job and it also enables companies can choose which data to store with full knowledge of data confidentiality/ sensitivity. This kills the flaws within the current storage market and enables stored data to be securely opened to the Cloud, without putting it at risk of breach.

All of this is done without impacting user accessibility and it is introducing secure storage as a consumption-based model, rather than the current

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