Confidential Virtual Machines, now in beta, will let Google Cloud customers keep data encrypted while it's in use.

Kelly Sheridan, Former Senior Editor, Dark Reading

July 14, 2020

3 Min Read

Google Cloud today announced a confidential computing feature called Confidential Virtual Machines, which keeps data encrypted while it's being processed. Confidential VMs is the first product in Google Cloud's confidential computing lineup, and it's now available in beta.

While Google Cloud already encrypts data at rest and in transit, information must be decrypted for organizations to use it. Businesses with vast amounts of cloud data want to query and index their data or use it to train machine learning models. Most in regulated industries, including financial, healthcare, and government sectors, worry about protecting their data in the cloud. 

In addition to the isolation and sandboxing Google already uses in its cloud infrastructure, its Confidential VMs will include memory encryption so businesses can further isolate workloads in the cloud. Confidential computing environments keep data encrypted in memory and "elsewhere outside the central processing unit (CPU)," Google Cloud explains in a blog post.

"Your data will stay encrypted while it is used, indexed, queried, or trained on," according to the post. "Encryption keys are generated in hardware, per VM, and not exportable."  

Confidential VMs run on second-generation AMD Epyc processors and leverage a feature called Secure Encrypted Virtualization, or SEV. This enables high performance while keeping the VM memory encrypted using a dedicated per-VM key generated and managed by the Epyc CPU. These keys are generated by the AMD processor during the creation of each VM and reside only within the VM, so they're inaccessible to Google and other VMs running on the same host. 

"The way we implement this technology offers real time encryption in use, so customers can ensure confidentiality of [their] most sensitive data in the cloud even while it's being processed," Sunil Potti, general manager and vice president of security for Google Cloud, said in a press briefing.

Confidential VMs are built on Shielded VMs to further harden the OS image and confirm the integrity of the firmware, kernel binaries, and drivers, officials say. Shielded VMs are a precursor to Confidential VMs in terms of security, Potti said. The new technology builds on the protection Shielded VMs provide against rootkits and bootkits to ensure integrity of the operating system.

Google worked with AMD to ensure the memory encryption doesn't interfere with performance by adding support for new OSS drivers (NVMe and gVNIC) to handle storage and network traffic with higher throughput than older protocols. Use cases of Confidential VMs include collaborating on sensitive data sets and conducting research without affecting the data's confidentiality.

All Google Cloud Platform workloads that currently run in VMs can also run as a Confidential VM, the company says. Businesses only need to check a box to enable it.

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About the Author(s)

Kelly Sheridan

Former Senior Editor, Dark Reading

Kelly Sheridan was formerly a Staff Editor at Dark Reading, where she focused on cybersecurity news and analysis. She is a business technology journalist who previously reported for InformationWeek, where she covered Microsoft, and Insurance & Technology, where she covered financial services. Sheridan earned her BA in English at Villanova University. You can follow her on Twitter @kellymsheridan.

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