 
1 2   ·   d e t e k t o r   i n t e r n a t i o n a l
Security News Every Day  
www. securityworldhotel.com
sold per-camera-per-month as a 
metered service. There were many 
of these at the shows I attended 
and this whole area of the industry 
is still shaping up in terms of pric-
ing, features, and market fit.
My hope is that as customers 
become better educated about the 
Cloud, we will see less misapplica-
tion of term. Remember: it is our 
job as providers to demonstrate 
leadership and help them along. 
For further clarification on the 
definition of the Cloud, we have 
made a short, informative and 
entertaining video: http://bit.ly/br
ivo                                            n
these types of headlines indi-
cate just how hungry marketing 
departments are to force the word 
"Cloud" into their publicity and 
literature. It's no wonder custom-
ers are confused.
So, where are the real Cloud 
applications? By category, the 
biggest emerging group is in video 
surveillance, variously known as 
hosted video or Video Software 
as a Service (VSaaS). Many of 
these are true Cloud applications 
because they are: a) hosted, b) 
multi-tenant, supporting numer-
ous customers in a single instance, 
c) massively scalable, and d) 
can be remotely accessed through 
holes in the customer firewall 
to saying this is a "Cloud based 
system" is a big stretch indeed. 
A second point of distinction: 
simply moving a software applica-
tion from a local server to a 3rd 
party data centre does not make 
it a Cloud application. It is com-
monly accepted that Cloud sys-
tems are defined by multi-tenancy, 
metered usage, rapid provisioning, 
and massive scalability. Think 
about it this way, if you have a 
server with an old application ar-
chitecture, and you move it 1,000 
miles to someone else's data cen-
tre, have you transformed it into 
a Cloud application? No. You're 
just playing hide-the-server. And it 
won't magically support thousands 
of end user organisations (scalable, 
multi-tenancy) or suddenly be any 
faster for new users to provision.
Common offenders I wit-
nessed at recent tradeshows were 
typically old-line software systems 
that needed a fresh coat of virtual 
paint to get ready for the ball...I 
mean show. In one of the worst 
examples I saw this spring, one 
company claimed to be offering 
a security system "using Cloud-
based protocols". Uh  that's just 
good old IP. While I have to credit 
their PR agency for working the 
term "Cloud" into their press re-
lease, it turns out that this was just 
an old-fashioned case of remote 
access. As much as anything else, 
Let's begin by reminding ourselves 
what the Cloud is all about. At 
a bare minimum, "Cloud" un-
equivocally implies "hosted". You 
can check this with the US Na-
tional Institute of Technology and 
Standards. They have published 
the most widely accepted and 
universally referenced definitions 
of Cloud technology (NIST SP 
800-145), and every one of them 
includes the concept of hosting.  
In practical terms, this key 
definition excludes systems that 
merely support connections to 
the Internet for remote access. 
Think about it: if remote access 
equals Cloud were true, your PC 
from 1995 with an AOL account 
would have qualified as a "Cloud 
system". In our industry, IP-based 
security products connected to 
the Internet solve many important 
problems, but they are not Cloud 
products in and of themselves. 
Saying otherwise is confusing and 
a disservice to our customers.  
A common offender in this 
regard is the new breed of IP 
security appliances  not the 
products, but the marketing. Let 
me state that I fully believe there 
is an important niche for products 
with an appliance architecture. For 
end users who simply can't wrap 
their heads around the Cloud, 
it's a comfortable alternative to 
the complexity and expense of 
legacy server designs. But making 
the leap from a local device that 
voice of
 
the security market
Willtherealcloud 
securitypleasestandup?
I have attended a number of tradeshows through the 
first half of 2012, and it's clear to me that many peo-
ple still don't understand the difference between real 
Cloud solutions, and products that merely connect to 
the Internet. It's equally clear that many vendors are 
actively confusing the market. 
By Steve Van Till, President and CEO, Brivo Systems
SteveVanTill,PresidentandCEO,BrivoSystems.