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Google unveils security suite, promising enhanced cloud visibility

The goal is to organize diverse security information into a single web portal where enterprise security administrators can view everything at once, the company said.
(iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Google Cloud users now will have more insight into what assets are connected to the platform and which ones present the most risk, the company says.

The Cloud Security Command Center (SCC) is in beta mode and ready for use for Google Cloud users, the company said Wednesday, eight months after the tool was introduced. Google’s cloud business accounts for about $1 billion in revenue per quarter, it said earlier this year.

The SCC inventories business data, identifies potential threats, remediates security issues and expands existing notification services, the company said. The goal is to organize diverse security information into a single web portal where enterprise security administrators can view everything at once.

“If you’re building applications or deploying infrastructure in the cloud, you need a central place to unify asset, vulnerability and threat data in their business context to help understand your security posture and act on changes,” Andy Chang, senior product manager for Google Cloud, said in a blog post.

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Google’s SCC also aims to help large organizations better understand where their cloud infrastructure, apps and data repositories are located. Those features could help firms avoid data breaches later blamed on misconfigured cloud services, Wired reported when SCC entered alpha testing. The new service organizes all assets that are publicly accessible into a single dashboard.

The beta release also comes with the services Cloud Datastore, Cloud DNS, Cloud Load Balancing, Cloud Spanner, Container Registry, Kubernetes Engine and Virtual Private Cloud.

Jeff Stone

Written by Jeff Stone

Jeff Stone is the editor-in-chief of CyberScoop, with a special interest in cybercrime, disinformation and the U.S. justice system. He previously worked as an editor at the Wall Street Journal, and covered technology policy for sites including the Christian Science Monitor and the International Business Times.

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