The security of all 1810 Surfshark servers in
66 countries has been levelled up by moving away from the obsolete
hard drive technology
Privacy
protection company Surfshark has become one of the first providers in the VPN
industry to operate a completely diskless server network. Moving away from the
hard drive technology improves the security of the infrastructure. Also, it
ensures that no server configuration files are stored locally, enables central
management of the whole network, and guarantees that it is always running the
latest software and configuration.
"The
diskless server network effectively minimizes security risks of
hard-drive-based server infrastructure and provides assurance in offering
highest quality privacy to our users," says Gabrielle Racai,
Communications manager at Surfshark. "There are only a few VPN providers
that have managed to move to a fully diskless VPN server infrastructure.
However, focusing on user privacy and security has always been our top
priority."
The
data stored on servers that run on hard drives is mostly operational and is
only required to initiate a successful VPN function. Running all servers on
volatile (RAM) memory means that any information, even the configuration files,
is wiped off automatically whenever a server is turned off.
Configuration
files stored on hard drive servers can still be accessed in case they are
seized or taken over by a third party. A RAM-only server solution eliminates
this security threat by ensuring that no information can be physically taken
from the servers.
A
centrally controlled network of diskless servers ensures that up-to-date
software is dispatched timely on the whole network. Also, RAM-only servers can
easily be cleared and refreshed remotely as a part of regular security
procedures.
Moving to a RAM-only infrastructure is the most recent security upgrade
of Surfshark, following the
launch
of two-factor authentication in February.