So today we have World Cloud Security Day. To completely understand this topic we need to know just what a "cloud" is. "The Cloud" is a term referring to other people's computers on the internet which are then leased to customers lacking the skill to implement and maintain their own clusters or other implementations.
They typically offer failover, backup, disaster recovery, backend configuration and maintenance, and a variety of other provisioning which is available — likely as an element of a fee schedule.
Now, I've never been a fan of the cloud. This is simply outsourcing by the inept to those only slightly more skilled. I for one choose to manage my own assets and assume granular control of those assets to the point of firewalling a good part of the "cloud" due to the various exploit attempts of their customers. If they would take care of their own business as well as they attempt to assume mine they would be much better off in both the skill and respectability department.
So World Cloud Security Day is observed each April 3rd to help raise awareness in the IT and security communities about the growing threats organizations associated with remote and hybrid work and BYOD.
I keep abreast of such data myself as a matter of personal pride. If you take care of business you should be able to handle the bulk of security threats out there because largely they are attempted by unskilled denizens of the cloud.
The cloud is not your friend. If you are of sufficient skill level, you can do everything those who wish to "sell" you nothing can do. They are there to let you outsource to them and pay them and since you're so stupid they do great amounts of business under those pretexts. I understand this is the first World Cloud Security Day. Know the risks associated with remote access and device
Our "drag and drop" generation of programmers are the crux of the problem and I forsee a day where AI implementation will make all humans obsolete just prior to their destruction of everything on the planet.