Cybercriminals Fighting Over Cloud Workloads for Cryptomining
Whether compromising misconfigured cloud infrastructure or taking advantage of free-tier cloud development platforms, attackers see a vast pool of workloads to use for cryptomining.
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Background for this topic.
Cloud computing involves delivering computing services—such as storage, processing, and networking—over the internet using remote data centers. This model enables organizations to scale resources dynamically without owning physical infrastructure. In security terms, the cloud environment is defined by multi-tenant infrastructure where multiple customers share hardware and software resources managed by a cloud provider.
Key security concerns include controlling access through strong identity and access management (IAM), protecting data with encryption both at rest and in transit, and managing vulnerabilities in shared infrastructure components. The cloud’s shared responsibility model requires customers to secure their applications and data while providers secure the underlying platform. Misconfigurations, weak access controls, and insufficient monitoring can expose cloud assets to unauthorized access or data leakage, making precise configuration and continuous security assessment essential.
Whether compromising misconfigured cloud infrastructure or taking advantage of free-tier cloud development platforms, attackers see a vast pool of workloads to use for cryptomining.
Info-Tech Research Group has released a new research blueprint to help organizations plan the components necessary to build a cloud security architecture.
Backed by Sequoia, Accel, and Cyberstarts, Cyera is building the security layer for the data plane in the cloud and enabling enterprises to identify and reduce risks across all cloud-based data repositories.