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The cloud-native computing industry is experiencing robust growth driven by increased adoption of containerization (especially Kubernetes) and microservices. There's a strong emphasis on automation, cost efficiency (FinOps), and observability to manage increasingly complex distributed systems. Security and sustainability are emerging as critical considerations, pushing innovation in AI-driven optimization and autonomous operations.
Total Assets Under Management (AUM)
Cloud Spending in United States
~Approximately 180 billion USD
(20-25% CAGR)
- Rapid adoption of cloud services.
- Increased migration of enterprise workloads.
- Growing demand for cloud-native applications.
Approximately 700 billion
Leveraging AI and machine learning to enable self-optimizing, self-healing, and self-scaling cloud-native environments, minimizing manual intervention and maximizing efficiency.
Focusing on designing, developing, and operating software and infrastructure with minimal environmental impact, particularly concerning energy consumption and carbon emissions in cloud environments.
Extending WebAssembly beyond browsers to server-side and edge computing, offering a lightweight, secure, and performant alternative to containers for certain workloads.
NIST CSF 2.0, released in 2024, expands its scope beyond critical infrastructure to all organizations, providing guidance for understanding, managing, and reducing cybersecurity risks.
This framework will drive greater investment in secure cloud-native deployments, directly impacting PerfectScale by emphasizing security as a key optimization metric for Kubernetes environments.
This U.S. Executive Order, issued in May 2021, mandates specific cybersecurity requirements for federal agencies and their contractors, emphasizing supply chain security, zero trust architecture, and software bill of materials (SBOMs).
The EO will push cloud-native solution providers like PerfectScale to enhance their security features and ensure their platforms comply with stringent federal cybersecurity standards, influencing enterprise security postures.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted new rules in July 2023 requiring public companies to disclose material cybersecurity incidents within four days and provide annual disclosures about their cybersecurity risk management, strategy, and governance.
These rules will increase the demand for robust security and observability tools within cloud-native environments for publicly traded companies, influencing how they manage and report cybersecurity risks in Kubernetes.
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