Monday, May 20, 2019

Word of the Day: data in motion

Word of the Day WhatIs.com
Daily updates on the latest technology terms | May 20, 2019
data in motion

Data in motion, also referred to as data in transit or data in flight, is digital information that is in the process of being transported between locations either within or between computer systems. The term can also be used to describe data within a computer's random access memory (RAM) that is ready to be read, accessed, updated or processed.

Data in motion includes the following scenarios: data moving from an Internet-capable endpoint device to a web-facing service in the cloud; data moving between virtual machines within and between cloud services and data that is traversing trusted private networks and an untrusted network such as the Internet. Once the data arrives at its final destination, it becomes data at rest.

Because data in motion is vulnerable to man in the middle (MiTM) attacks, it is often encrypted to prevent interception. For example, the iSCSI transport layer incorporates IPSec security, which can encrypt data as it is transferred between two devices to prevent a hacker with a sniffer from seeing the contents of that data. IPSec has been used extensively as a transit encryption protocol for virtual private network (VPN) tunnels; it makes use of cryptography algorithms such as Triple DES (3DES) and Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). Encryption platform software can also be integrated with existing enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems to keep data in motion secure.

Encrypting data in motion

Perhaps the best-known use of cryptography for the data in transit scenario is secure sockets layer (SSL) and transport layer security (TLS). TLS provides a transport layer -- encrypted "tunnel" between email servers or message transfer agents (MTAs), whereas SSL certificates encrypt private communications over the Internet using private and public keys. The ongoing management and responsibility of data in transit resides in the correct application of security controls, including the relevant cryptography processes to handle encryption key management.

Cryptographic protocols have been in use for many years in the form of hypertext transfer protocol secure (HTTPS), typically to provide communication security over the Internet, but it has now become the standard encryption approach for browser-to-web host and host-to-host communications in both cloud and non-cloud environments.

Recent increases show a number of cloud-based providers using multiple factors of encryption, coupled with the ability for users to encrypt their own data at rest within the cloud environment. The use of symmetric cryptography for key exchange followed by symmetric encryption for content confidentiality is also increasing. This approach looks to bolster and enhance standard encryption levels and strengths of encryption.

Quote of the Day

 
"In addition to secure interconnections to protect data in motion, enterprises also need to focus on the security of data at rest." - Chiaren Cushing

Learning Center

 

Big data tooling rolls with the changing seas of analytics
On the eve of the Strata conference in New York, big data tooling continues to morph. This news story tracks some recent product activity of noted Hadoop vendors, uncovering the paths they're taking from alternative data warehousing to full-fledged big data analytics systems.

5 modern ETL tools for microservices data integration
Microservices data integration requires real-time data. Traditional ETL tools perform batch integration, which just doesn't work for microservices. Learn about modern ETL tools that provide the real-time data integration needed for distributed applications.

'Big data' in motion: Where does it make sense?
Data architects creating operational business intelligence applications may put MapReduce and Hadoop 'big data' in motion using a fast messaging infrastructure.

How do APIs work, and how can you ensure they are secure?
When it comes to accessing information via APIs, companies should have a set of security policies. Our expert explains how APIs work and how security policies will help safeguard sensitive information, while allowing access to approved users.

Challenges of data management in the internet of things
Yesterday's approaches to data management are no match for the volume, diversity and interconnectivity that characterize IoT. Equinix's Chiaren Cushing discusses what needs to change -- and how.

Quiz Yourself

 
The following document section __________ the scope of the project.
a. will explain
b. explains

Answer

Stay in Touch

 
For feedback about any of our definitions or to suggest a new definition, please contact me at: mrouse@techtarget.com

Visit the Word of the Day Archives and catch up on what you've missed!

FOLLOW US

TwitterRSS
About This E-Newsletter
This e-newsletter is published by the TechTarget network. To unsubscribe from Whatis.com, click here. Please note, this will not affect any other subscriptions you have signed up for.
TechTarget

TechTarget, Whatis, 275 Grove Street, Newton, MA 02466. Contact: webmaster@techtarget.com

Copyright 2018 TechTarget. All rights reserved.

No comments: