When it comes to cybersecurity, it does help to look at the data centre and the cloud environment first. There's a tendency to think about the end result, like IP theft or data destruction or data manipulation, any one of which could make for a sci-fi movie and keep all of us up at night.
If, however, you start with the data centre itself and say, “How am I securing how servers interact from the interior? How am I preventing intruders from moving laterally throughout an environment?”, you're actually covering all those bases. Yes, that's what my company does, but the reason I joined Illumio was that, having worked in the Pentagon and having looked at the range of disruptions that could happen, whether to a weapon's platform or to the financial sector or to the economy, I would say you really want to start in the worst-case place. If an intruder breaks into a data centre and can move around unencumbered, everything is on the table. So yes to standards. Actually the French government has been very forward-leaning in that regard for security data centres, and other countries have as well. If you start there, then everything else, even an intrusion into an IoT in someone's home, will ultimately connect back to a server, and so that could be prevented.