TOTAL SECURITY AND CONTROL OF YOUR VIRTUAL MACHINES

A QUESTION OF TRUST

There is an unwritten rule in hosting, or for that matter any internal IT system – “you have to trust your sys-admin!” In other words, however much policy, protection systems or due-process an organisation has, one way or another there are going to be one or more people with the “technical keys to the kingdom.”

In the case of clients choosing service providers this has always been a considerable issue, as the engagement is as much about getting through the issue of trust as it is validating the technical capability or the commercial offering.

DELIVERING PROTECTION

This is where secure VM’s come in. In summary, Secure VM’s take the guess work and trust question out of the hoster and client relationship, allowing the client to deploy Private Cloud solutions onto a platform, secure in the knowledge that no one else can look at, export or change the data or settings.

Using a secure VM based Private Cloud solution from Acuutech, you are empowered with the guarantee that for the first time, your hoster or IT department is not able to look at or steal your valuable company information.

WHAT DOES THAT REALLY MEAN IN PRACTICE

Guarantee your data’s protection. Meet compliance requirements and gain full security control with your hosted platform.

PROTECTION WITHOUT LIMITATION

Even when using our advanced secure VM solution, you don’t lose any of the benefits of our platform. We still provide datacentre high-availability, back-up and recovery services.

However, don’t worry, the data within the files we move or back-up is encrypted using industry standard BitLocker encryption during migrations that only you have the decryption key for. So although we back-up the files, we cannot read or get at the data in any way, even during a restore.

ROCK SOLID PROTECTION

Once enabled, at Acuutech we cannot gain any form of access to your VM’s – beyond starting them up or turning them off. We cannot get access to your virtual hard disk files, make changes to the settings of your virtual machine or look inside/ connect to the machines in any way.