The tech industry is booming—Deloitte projects that global spending on the sector will increase by 9.3% this year—AI is the hot new commodity on the digital market, and data is driving it all. That has led to a heightened demand for data center capacity, which is increasing by 15% annually—though that’s not enough, according to JLL. With that added demand comes a rise in threats, and physical danger to data center security is often overlooked. Kiersten Todt, former CISA chief of staff, told IT Brew in a recent interview the lack of focus on those threats represents a dangerous gap in security. “A physical breach can have the same catastrophic impact as a cyberattack,” Todt said. IT Brew spoke to Todt to get a better sense of the danger, and some solutions. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. The physical threats to data centers are very real, clearly. What can you tell us about what you’ve seen? It’s sort of like breaking and entering. Several years ago, when I was at CISA, we saw physical attacks on grids in North Carolina. I think it was gunshots at the time. In this world of technology, we’re thinking about digital attacks and digital breaches. But we can’t forget that these entities, particularly physical structures, are just as vulnerable to physical breaches. A physical breach can lead to the theft of sensitive information, financial losses, operational disruptions, and then even reputational damage. Why you shouldn’t ignore an IRL attack.—EH |