How tech giants are safeguarding your data at their mammoth facilities (IANS Special)

IANS  |  New Delhi 

With the dramatic rise in Internet and data breaches in the past couple of years amid nation-state actors now threatening critical and sensitive government data, it has become crucial for the tech companies to put in place top-of-the-line measures to stay ahead of hackers.

Not just on the ground, has even deployed an experimental, shipping container-size data centre on the seafloor near Scotland's to help coastal communities connect to the Internet in a secure and efficient way.

Data centres are facilities that centralise an organisation's (IT) operations and equipment, as well as where it stores, manages and disseminates its data. These also house a network's critical systems, hence facing a heightened risk of attack.

Since data centres are generally backed up remotely, physical attacks may be less attractive than cyber attacks for bad actors, say experts.

"While physical is given utmost importance at data centres, it is critical for organisations to beef up their cybersecurity posture through regular vulnerability assessments and penetration testing to check their readiness to tackle cyber threats," Sanjay Katkar, Joint Managing Director and Chief Technology Officer, Quick Heal Technologies Limited, told IANS.

has built custom servers exclusively for its data centres, never selling or distributing them externally.

"We've also designed them so they don't include or software -- reducing the number of potential vulnerabilities," says the company, adding that it has robust disaster recovery measures in place.

For example, in the event of a fire or any other disruption, shifts data access automatically and seamlessly to another data centre so that the users can keep working, uninterrupted.

"Our emergency backup generators continue to power our data centres even in the event of a power failure," the company informed on its website.

While you work, the big tech companies automatically back up critical data.

The companies also rigorously track the location and status of each hard drive at their data centres and destroy hard drives that have reached the end of their lives to prevent access to the data.

For example, built its first data centre in in the US state of and the complex now consists of three massive buildings.

"The smallest of the three data centre buildings is about 350,000 square feet in size and the newest, which is still under construction, will measure over 450,000 square feet. Each one could easily hold a modern and still have plenty of room to spare," says

"Data centre demands maintaining the confidentiality, integrity and availability of data.

"Protecting requires greater flexibility and modernisation to keep pace with increasingly sophisticated threats as the attackers know targeting the data centers will reap them more ROI," Sunil Sharma, Managing Director-Sales, and SAARC, Sophos, told IANS.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, February 17 2019. 10:42 IST