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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2024-03-11 11:40:54.262

Source: https://thehackernews.com/2024/03/data-leakage-prevention-in-age-of-cloud.html

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Data Leakage Prevention in the Age of Cloud Computing: A New Approach. As the shift of IT infrastructure to cloud-based solutions celebrates its 10-year anniversary, it becomes clear that traditional on-premises approaches to data security are becoming obsolete. Rather than protecting the endpoint, DLP solutions need to refocus their efforts to where corporate data resides - in the browser. A new guide by LayerX titled "On-Prem is Dead. Have You Adjusted Your Web DLP Plan?" (download here) dives into this transition, detailing its root cause, possible solution paths forward and actionable implementation examples. After reading the guide, security and IT professionals will be equipped with the relevant information they need to update and upgrade their DLP solutions. Guide highlights include: Why DLP The guide commences with an explanation of the role of the DLP. DLPs protect data from unwanted exposure by classification, determining its sensitivity level, and enforcing protective action. This is supposed to allow organizations to detect and prevent data breaches and other malicious activities and meet compliance regulations. What Has Changed for DLP and Corporate Data However, DLPs were designed with on-prem environments in mind. In these scenarios, data that leaves the environment is usually attached to an email or a hardware device. Therefore, DLPs were traditionally placed on the gateway between the corporate network and the public Internet. The rise of SaaS apps and website use requires an approach that addresses corporate data in its new location: online. 3 Data Protection Paths Forward To address this gap, there are three ways security and IT teams can operate. 1. No Change - Using DLPs solutions as they are while limiting data uploads to insecure online locations. As explained, this solution is partially effective. 2. CASB DLP - Inspecting files with SaaS apps and enforcing policies between apps and devices and apps. This solution is effective for some sanctioned apps, but not for all or for unsanctioned ones. 3. Browser DLP - Monitoring data activity at the transaction point. This solution enforces policies across all vectors - devices, apps and the browser. Since the browser is the interface between the device and websites and SaaS apps, it is the optimal location for placing the DLP. An enterprise browser extension can operate as a browser DLP, thanks to its ability to deeply monitor user activities and the web page execution. It can also enforce actions like alerting and blocking dangerous user actions. Example Browser DLP Policies Here are some examples of DLP policies that are designed to answer data location in a cloud environments: This guide is an essential read for any organization dealing with data that is online. You can read it here. State of AI in the Cloud 2024 Find out what 150,000+ cloud accounts revealed about the AI surge. Goodbye, Atlassian Server. Goodbye… Backups? Protect your data on Atlassian Cloud from disaster with daily backups and on-demand restores. Take Action Fast with Censys Search for Security Teams Stay ahead of advanced threat actors with best-in-class threat intelligence from Censys Search.

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MISCELLANEOUS // Refocusing Data Leakage Prevention for Cloud Environments

Traditional Data Leakage Prevention (DLP) solutions, accustomed to on-premises IT infrastructure, now require adaptation to better secure data within cloud-based environments.

The effectiveness of on-premise DLPs diminishes as corporate data increasingly resides online, necessitating a shift in data protection strategies.

A new guide by LayerX, "On-Prem is Dead. Have You Adjusted Your Web DLP Plan?", outlines this transition and offers solutions for evolving DLP approaches.

The guide suggests three possible data protection paths: maintaining the status quo with traditional DLPs, adopting Cloud Access Security Broker (CASB) DLP for SaaS app monitoring, or implementing Browser DLP for comprehensive monitoring and policy enforcement.

Browser DLP is recommended as the most effective solution, using enterprise browser extensions to monitor user activity and website execution directly.

Examples of browser DLP policies, tailored to safeguard data in cloud environments, showcase practical measures that can be taken to prevent unauthorized data exposure and cyber threats.

IT and security professionals are encouraged to read the guide to better understand and implement updated DLP solutions suitable for the current cloud-centric landscape.