Cloud Access Security Broker

From Encyclopedia of Cybersecurity

Cloud Access Security Broker

A Cloud Access Security Broker (CASB) is a security solution or service that acts as an intermediary between cloud service users and cloud service providers to enforce security policies, monitor activity, and protect data in cloud environments.

Overview

Cloud Access Security Brokers provide organizations with visibility, control, and security capabilities to manage the use of cloud services and applications, including Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS), and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS). CASBs serve as a central point of control for implementing security policies, enforcing compliance requirements, and protecting sensitive data as it moves between on-premises environments and cloud services.

Functions

Key functions of Cloud Access Security Brokers include:

  1. Visibility and Discovery: Providing visibility into cloud usage and shadow IT by discovering and categorizing cloud services and applications accessed by users within the organization.
  2. Policy Enforcement: Enforcing security policies, access controls, and data protection measures to govern user access, activity, and data interactions in cloud environments, such as encryption, tokenization, or data loss prevention (DLP).
  3. Threat Protection: Detecting and mitigating threats, vulnerabilities, and malicious activities in cloud services, such as malware, phishing, insider threats, or account compromises, through real-time monitoring and threat intelligence.
  4. Data Governance: Applying data governance policies, such as data classification, tagging, and retention, to ensure compliance with regulatory requirements and industry standards for data protection and privacy.
  5. Compliance Monitoring: Monitoring compliance with regulatory requirements, industry standards, and internal policies for cloud usage, data protection, and access controls, providing audit trails and reporting for compliance assessments.
  6. Identity and Access Management: Integrating with identity and access management (IAM) systems to enforce authentication, authorization, and single sign-on (SSO) for cloud services, ensuring secure and seamless access for authorized users.
  7. Incident Response: Providing incident response capabilities, such as incident detection, investigation, and remediation, for security incidents or breaches affecting cloud services and data.

Deployment Models

Cloud Access Security Brokers can be deployed in various deployment models, including:

  • Proxy-based CASB: Acting as a proxy between users and cloud services to inspect, monitor, and control traffic in real-time, providing inline security enforcement and data protection.
  • API-based CASB: Integrating with cloud service APIs to gain visibility, enforce policies, and secure data at the application level, without requiring network traffic redirection or proxying.
  • Hybrid CASB: Combining both proxy-based and API-based approaches to provide comprehensive visibility, control, and security across a wide range of cloud services and applications.

Benefits

Cloud Access Security Brokers offer several benefits for organizations adopting cloud services:

  • Enhanced Security Posture: Strengthening security controls, enforcing policies, and protecting data across cloud environments to mitigate risks and prevent security breaches.
  • Improved Compliance: Ensuring compliance with regulatory requirements, industry standards, and internal policies for data protection, privacy, and governance in cloud environments.
  • Increased Visibility: Providing visibility into cloud usage, activities, and data interactions to identify and mitigate security threats, unauthorized access, and compliance violations.
  • Centralized Management: Offering a centralized platform for managing security policies, access controls, and data protection measures across multiple cloud services and applications.
  • Flexibility and Scalability: Adapting to evolving cloud architectures, services, and deployment models while scaling security controls and capabilities to meet the needs of growing cloud environments.

Challenges

Despite the benefits, Cloud Access Security Brokers face several challenges:

  1. Complexity and Integration: Integrating with diverse cloud services, APIs, and IAM systems while managing the complexity of security configurations, policy enforcement, and data protection measures.
  2. Performance Impact: Balancing security controls and performance requirements to avoid latency, disruptions, or limitations on cloud service functionality and user experience.
  3. Shadow IT: Addressing the use of unsanctioned cloud services and applications by users or departments within the organization, which may bypass CASB controls and increase security risks.
  4. Data Residency and Sovereignty: Addressing concerns about data residency, sovereignty, and jurisdictional requirements for storing, processing, and transferring data in multi-cloud or international environments.
  5. Vendor Lock-in: Avoiding vendor lock-in and ensuring interoperability, portability, and flexibility when selecting and integrating CASB solutions with cloud service providers and security ecosystems.