Off-Prem

PaaS + IaaS

Telcos find cloud migrations, security, are a pain in the IaaS

Carriers consume less than half the cloud they committed to use


Telecom companies have consumed only 48 percent of the cloud they have committed to, yet seek to secure more, according to a report released late last week by Infosys.

The outsourcing giant's "Cloud Radar – Telecom Industry Report" is compiled from over 400 industry insiders, from mid-level management to execs to C-suites. It concludes that "the industry is significantly increasing cloud spending."

The fear is that without more cloud, telcos are not full optimizing their 5G networks efficiently – and consequently not meeting the high-speed and low-latency needed for IoT and edge computing applications.

Therefore they continue to buy – even as the product is not fully used – in the hopes it will reduce costs, increase operational efficiency and improve scalability.

They're prevented from meeting full utilization, according to Infosys, by the challenges of migration, competition and security.

Infosys attributed the slow uptake of procured cloud to the complexities associated with transitioning from legacy IT systems – a process that "often involves intricate interdependencies and customizations."

That's further complicated by cloud offering services that directly compete with the telecoms' own offerings – like edge computing, IoT platforms, and virtualized network functions (NFVs).

Infosys also warned that the adoption of cloud-native 5G networks and virtualization can expose data to interception. It cited cloud-based assets – including software-as-a-service apps and databases – as primary targets for cyber crime. The risk is enhanced by the number of IoT devices on the network, which are susceptible to botnet attacks, and human configuration errors.

Forty-five percent of respondents admitted to allowing any department head or IT manager the ability to deploy new cloud infrastructure software or applications – a move Infosys deemed "too lax from a security perspective."

Another problem highlighted in the report is that a huge chunk of 44 percent of critical cloud decisions is being made in isolation – meaning the IT department or the business makes the decision, instead of working jointly.

"Considering that cloud saturates every corner of the corporate enterprise, decisions about cloud need to involve leaders, technologists, and users," wrote the report authors.

Still, migration to the cloud – a process that for most has taken place long-term over decades – has mostly worked in the telco industry's favor. Over three-quarters said cloud migration efforts have proven to be very effective or extremely effective and have resulted in significant cost savings and improved performance.

However, some improvement could be made when it comes to understanding those cost savings. While telecom cloud managers were found generally confident in their ability to run their systems, they were much less so in monitoring, predicting, and optimizing associated costs. ®

Send us news
17 Comments

UK ICO not happy with Google's plans to allow device fingerprinting

Also, Ascension notifies 5.6M victims, Krispy Kreme bandits come forward, LockBit 4.0 released, and more

Infosec experts divided on AI's potential to assist red teams

Yes, LLMs can do the heavy lifting. But good luck getting one to give evidence

Even Netflix struggles to identify and understand the cost of its AWS estate

If you have trouble keeping track of your various streaming subscriptions, you're gonna love the irony

AWS now renting monster HPE servers, even in clusters of 7,680-vCPUs and 128TB

Heir to Superdome goes cloudy for those who run large in-memory databases and apps that need them

Trump administration wants to go on cyber offensive against China

The US has never attacked Chinese critical infrastructure before, right?

Deloitte says cyberattack on Rhode Island benefits portal carries 'major security threat'

Personal and financial data probably stolen

$800 'AI' robot for kids bites the dust along with its maker

Moxie maker Embodied is going under, teaching important lessons about cloud services

Infosys founder calls for 70-hour work week – again – claiming it creates jobs

Plus: China wants to end AI mashups of classic vids; TSMC set to open Japan fab; and more

Are your Prometheus servers and exporters secure? Probably not

Plus: Netscaler brute force barrage; BeyondTrust API key stolen; and more

Apache issues patches for critical Struts 2 RCE bug

More details released after devs allowed weeks to apply fixes

Lights out for 18 more DDoS booters in pre-Christmas Operation PowerOFF push

Holiday cheer comes in the form of three arrests and 27 shuttered domains

Three more vulns spotted in Ivanti CSA, all critical, one 10/10

Patch up, everyone – that admin portal is mighty attractive to your friendly cyberattacker