ASD warned cloud accreditation U-turn jeopardises security, adoption

Service providers, IT industry body concerned by deregulation.

By Justin Hendry  Mar 5 2020
https://www.itnews.com.au/news/asd-warned-cloud-accreditation-u-turn-jeopardises-security-adoption-538913


The abolition of the Australian Signals Directorate’s centralised cloud 
services certification program (CSCP) has surfaced very real concerns over the 
future security of government data and the impact on public sector cloud 
adoption rates.

The policy U-turn was revealed on Monday after an independent review 
recommended closing the program from July and creating “new co-designed cloud 
security guidelines with industry”.

The ASD and Digital Transformation Agency are expecting the change to “open up 
the Australian cloud market” and give agencies a “greater range of secure and 
cost-effective cloud services”.

But the move to effectively deregulate how cloud services are accredited for 
government has been met with mixed reaction by cloud providers and the broader 
IT industry.

While the CSCP and the accompanying certified cloud service list (CCSL) was by 
no means perfect, having created bottlenecks and confusion, it had become the 
trusted benchmark for government cloud services.

Moving to a scheme of self-regulation, where agencies are responsible for their 
own cloud security assessments based on advice, could become equally difficult 
to traverse.

And if agency compliance with the cyber security components of the protective 
security policy framework is anything to go by, such a change could risk the 
security of government data.

It comes at a time when cyber security threats are increasing and government 
trust is at an all-time low.

This is recognised by the Australian Information Industry Association, which is 
concerned that ASD ceasing cloud security assessments may impact government 
cloud adoption.

The industry body is worried that the shift “may cause confusion” amongst 
agencies, who will now become responsible for their own cloud security 
assessments.

“The mixed ability for small and even larger government agencies to conduct 
cyber threat risk assessments may lead to risk adverse behaviours due to a lack 
of cyber skills in agencies resulting in a decline in adoption of latest cloud 
technologies and digital services.”

This concern, particularly around cyber security, is shared by a number of 
cloud providers who have been accredited to carry protected Australian 
government data.

Vault Cloud, which was one of the first providers to gain protected-level 
certification in 2017, considers regulation necessary requirement for cloud 
services that hold sensitive government data.

It is one of only six cloud providers to have been certified to a protected 
level to date. Other providers include Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, 
Macquarie Government, Sliced Tech and NTT Australia.

CEO Rupert Taylor-Price told iTnews the decision was significant, with the ASD 
certification process pivotal to Vault Cloud increasing its security posture 
over the last seven years.

“The cyber threat that Australia faces has never been greater, the role ASD has 
played in protecting the sensitive and personal data the government holds 
cannot be overstated,” he said.

“Going forward as an industry we need to deliver a level of security that 
citizens can continue to trust.”

Macquarie Government managing director Aidan Tudehope said the program had 
helped and encouraged agencies to adopt cloud services by placing a “spotlight 
on cyber security".

“It basically forced the cloud providers to look at themselves and for them to 
be assessed against the Australian government’s information security manual,” 
he told iTnews.

“Not against their own benchmarks, not against whatever they felt like was the 
right hurdle, but against what the Australian government needed and required.

Tudehope said the challenge for government now was determining what the new 
“new benchmark” will look like.

But he said this could be particularly problematic for smaller agencies, which 
don’t necessarily have extensive cyber experience.

“There are a lot of providers out there talking about cyber security and how 
they’re secure, but no benchmark now as how to assess them,” Tudehope said.

Sliced Tech echoed Tudehope’s concerns, suggesting that there is “considerable 
work to be undertaken within agencies to understand the ramifications of these 
ASD changes”.

“Sliced Tech looks forward to greater communication, guidance and support to 
both agencies and industry to reduce possible confusion during this 
transitionary period,” it said.

But it also believes that strengthening the IRAP assessor program will “ensure 
greater confident in the program and further drive enablement of cloud services 
adoption within government agencies”.

Other protected-level certified cloud providers like Microsoft were less 
perturbed by the change, despite only emerging from the onerous cloud 
certification process less than two years ago.

“Microsoft welcomes the certainty around government cloud assurance 
arrangements that the announcement from ASD and DTA provide,” a Microsoft 
spokesperson said.

“Microsoft is committed to continuing to undertake IRAP assessments of our 
services to support agencies to meet their requirements under the government 
information security manual and to appropriately access and manage risk in 
their adoption of cloud services.”

SAP and Equinix, who aren't present on the CCSL and stand to benefit from the 
changes, welcomed the decision.

"The announcement is a positive step towards addressing long standing concerns 
that previous arrangements hindered the government and the public’s ability to 
benefit from cloud services offered by a broader range of providers,“ SAP said.

Equinix Australia public sector head Derek Paterson said the decision will have 
an “extremely positive impact on the industry and accelerate the government’s 
digital transformation journey“.

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