SMEJ Guardrail is a security and resource configuration compliance solution tailored for SMEJ’s vast AWS estate. Using SMEJ Guardrail, the company can maintain standard security measures across its AWS accounts and validate that each account adheres to cloud governance guidelines established by Sony Group Corporation. The initial development and implementation of SMEJ Guardrail took about 3 months; during this time, AWS provided technical support and consultations to aid SMEJ’s journey.
The foundation of SMEJ Guardrail is AWS Security Hub, a unified security service that centralizes and prioritizes security findings across various AWS services. AWS Security Hub assesses the company’s AWS resources against established best practices and industry benchmarks, such as the Center for Internet Security and AWS Foundational Security Best Practices. These best practices encompass a range of checks, from proper encryption settings to detecting suspicious activities. As a cloud security posture management solution, AWS Security Hub performs these best practice checks automatically. With this capability, SMEJ can detect potential vulnerabilities and deploy remediation actions as necessary. The company has also implemented automated remediation mechanisms to promptly address security threats.
With SMEJ Guardrail, the company can standardize its security processes and therefore maintain a uniform security layer across its AWS accounts. SMEJ can also view the results of its threat detection and compliance checks across its organization in a central place, gaining better visibility into the health of its AWS estate. “By performing centralized management and visualization using AWS Security Hub, we were able to standardize our security levels, which had varied for each AWS account,” says Wakasa.
SMEJ Guardrail also uses Amazon GuardDuty to monitor accounts for suspicious activities and AWS CloudTrail to track account actions across AWS and support audits and governance. Using AWS CloudFormation templates—which speed up cloud provisioning with infrastructure as code—SMEJ can also adapt and expand its security protocols as needed.
The framework’s benefits extend beyond standardized security. In particular, AWS security services are much more cost effective than external providers, which helps reduce the cost of SMEJ’s entire security portfolio. “We only deploy first-party services, so we do not have to pay license or usage fees,” says Tomoyuki Shirakawa, director of SMEJ. “And by using managed AWS services, we can keep our costs down while maintaining optimal availability and performance.”
With an infrastructure-as-code approach and AWS CloudFormation templates, SMEJ can scale horizontally to expand its digital infrastructure as demands grow. And by using AWS-managed services, SMEJ can make sure that its solutions adhere to AWS best practices and benefit from recommendations given by the AWS team. Furthermore, creating a programmable infrastructure has directly boosted staff productivity. Instead of having to navigate technical challenges, SMEJ’s teams can now shift their focus onto core tasks, which has optimized operations so that teams can deliver security results more efficiently.