The emergence of reports about a data center in the United Arab Emirates being struck underscored the increasing vulnerability of digital infrastructure to unexpected threats. As data centers get drawn into geopolitical conflicts, the long-held belief that cloud infrastructure is perpetually accessible is beginning to seem increasingly vulnerable.
The problem lies not in conflict alone, but in the deeper meaning it carries. There is an increasing imperative for companies to build systems capable of enduring abrupt and unforeseen disruptions. Such events remain relatively rare, of course, yet they highlight a question that is frequently postponed.
What happens if vital systems go offline? Cloud services have become the core of enterprise infrastructure, as IDC notes that 88 percent of organizations are either implementing or already running a hybrid cloud environment. However, as dependence on cloud services has increased, so has the importance of preparing for potential interruptions.
Yet achieving this is far more difficult than it sounds. Adopting hybrid and multi-cloud approaches is becoming essential for building resilience, as they enable workloads to be flexibly distributed and relocated whenever required.
