SaaS Security Options
The SaaS/FaaS model entrusts the provider with the responsibility for safeguarding the service infrastructure. Utilizing a service from a well-known provider ensures that it has the fundamental safeguards of defense, monitoring, and response, fault tolerance, backup, and system recovery.
For instance, the link provides information on the information security architecture of Google’s cloud services. But whether it’s email conversation, files on a file resource, or application source code, safeguarding service content is still up to the user.
Many SaaS and FaaS providers include built-in security measures, such as Microsoft Office 365’s Advanced Threat Protection. They implement the bare minimum necessary set of security measures, but are typically too limited and uncustomizable. Another illustration is Google App Engine, which has an application scanner and built-in firewalls (including a DDoS filter).
Which commercially available products assist in protecting client data while utilising SaaS, FaaS, PaaS, or CaaS cloud services:
- This is Cloud Access Security Brocker in the context of SaaS. (CASB).
- The Cloud Workload Protection Platform (CWPP) solution may be used to safeguard the fPaaS or CaaS option.
- The user may make use of API Gateway and static code analysis for serverless apps or FaaS.
To read our blog on “Beamy receives $9 million to help businesses find and manage SaaS apps,” click here.