Protecting Hybrid and Multi-cloud Data
How to bridge the gaps in data protection for seamless backup and recovery
Key Takeaways
⇨ How to manage data fragmentation and data protection in hybrid and multicloud environments
While public cloud providers are responsible for the protection and availability of the cloud, it is still the customer’s responsibility to protect resources in the cloud. This is further complicated by the fact that the in-solution tools that public cloud providers offer are also very different from each other. So protecting data across a multi-cloud or hybrid environment becomes very tricky. Download this ebook and learn how to deliver a consistent level of data protection across clouds.
As enterprises pursue digital transformation, they are adopting the cloud for the agility, flexibility, and scale it offers. That often means attempting to choose between a variety of public clouds, while maintaining some on-premises infrastructure.
Today, hybrid or multicloud architectures are almost unavoidable. They occur sometimes by choice, but most often develop organically over time. Enterprises choose cloud providers for specific purposes based on their use cases, budget, technical and business requirements, geographic location, and other reasons. It’s typical for an organization to have workloads across multiple clouds—preferring Google Cloud Platform for development and testing, let’s say, or AWS for business analytics, or Microsoft Azure for disaster recovery.
Explore related questions
The move to hybrid and multicloud environments has brought with it a number of benefits,
including:
• Flexibility to choose best-in-class providers for specific workloads or use cases
• Ability to find the most competitive pricing
• Avoidance of vendor lock-in
• Enhanced resilience
• Improved risk management, in the event one provider is compromised, for example
Download this ebook sponsored by Avalara brought to you by rubrik.