The 2024 Thales Cloud Security Study is in its fourth consecutive year of research. This year’s study revisits the latest trends affecting cloud security. With 3,000 respondents from 18 countries across 37 industries, the report reflects the insights of individual contributors and managerial and executive levels within enterprises ranging from $100M USD to +2B USD in annual revenue/turnover.
Along with its sister report, the Thales Global Data Threat Report, this 2024 Thales Cloud Security Study looks into aspects of cloud security and revisits the impact of a dynamically expanding and complex attack surface. Unprecedented demand for compute and a growing volume of data challenge priorities for achieving better, more secure cloud adoption. Fittingly, despite cloud workloads becoming increasingly short-lived, cloud computing has become a more permanent technology for enterprises. While workloads and new architectures in the cloud are increasingly modular and dynamic, the evolving demands they bring for operations and security are constant and increasing.
As the cloud attack surface expands, organizations must get a firm grasp on the data they have stored in the cloud, the keys they’re using to encrypt it, and the ability to have complete visibility into who is accessing the data and how it is being used."
• 31% prioritized SaaS applications
• 30% prioritized Cloud Storage
• 26% prioritized Cloud Management Infrastructure
with 44% of respondents reporting such an incident. 14% reported a breach in the past 12 months.
yet cloud data encryption rates remain stubbornly low with less than 10% of enterprises claiming they have encrypted 80% or more of their cloud data.
65% Nearly two-thirds of respondents identify it as a current concern. Even more (72%) say it is a future concern.
secrets management is the top-cited issue at 56%