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What Is Shadow Data? Examples, Risks and How to Detect It

December 27, 2023
3
 Min Read
Data Security

What is Shadow Data?

Shadow data refers to any organizational data that exists outside the centralized and secured data management framework. This includes data that has been copied, backed up, or stored in a manner not subject to the organization's preferred security structure. This elusive data may not adhere to access control limitations or be visible to monitoring tools, posing a significant challenge for organizations. Shadow data is the ultimate ‘known unknown’. You know it exists, but you don’t know where it is exactly. And, more importantly, because you don’t know how sensitive the data is you can’t protect it in the event of a breach. 

You can’t protect what you don’t know.

Where Does Shadow Data Come From?

Whether it’s created inadvertently or on purpose, data that becomes shadow data is simply data in the wrong place, at the wrong time. Let's delve deeper into some common examples of where shadow data comes from:

  • Persistence of Customer Data in Development Environments:

The classic example of customer data that was copied and forgotten. When customer data gets copied into a dev environment from production, to be used as test data… But the problem starts when this duplicated data gets forgotten and never is erased or is backed up to a less secure location. So, this data was secure in its organic location, and never intended to be copied – or at least not copied and forgotten.

Unfortunately, this type of human error is common.

If this data does not get appropriately erased or backed up to a more secure location, it transforms into shadow data, susceptible to unauthorized access.

  • Decommissioned Legacy Applications:

Another common example of shadow data involves decommissioned legacy applications. Consider what becomes of historical customer data or Personally Identifiable Information (PII) when migrating to a new application. Frequently, this data is left dormant in its original storage location, lingering there until a decision is made to delete it - or not.  It may persist for a very long time, and in doing so, become increasingly invisible and a vulnerability to the organization.

  • Business Intelligence and Analysis:

Your data scientists and business analysts will make copies of production data to mine it for trends and new revenue opportunities.  They may test historic data, often housed in backups or data warehouses, to validate new business concepts and develop target opportunities.  This shadow data may not be removed or properly secured once analysis has completed and become vulnerable to misuse or leakage.

  • Migration of Data to SaaS Applications:

The migration of data to Software as a Service (SaaS) applications has become a prevalent phenomenon. In today's rapidly evolving technological landscape, employees frequently adopt SaaS solutions without formal approval from their IT departments, leading to a decentralized and unmonitored deployment of applications. This poses both opportunities and risks, as users seek streamlined workflows and enhanced productivity. On one hand, SaaS applications offer flexibility and accessibility, enabling users to access data from anywhere, anytime. On the other hand, the unregulated adoption of these applications can result in data security risks, compliance issues, and potential integration challenges.

  • Use of Local Storage by Shadow IT Applications:

Last but not least, a breeding ground for shadow data is shadow IT applications, which can be created, licensed or used without official approval (think of a script or tool developed in house to speed workflow or increase productivity). The data produced by these applications is often stored locally, evading the organization's sanctioned data management framework. This not only poses a security risk but also introduces an uncontrolled element in the data ecosystem.

Shadow Data vs Shadow IT

You're probably familiar with the term "shadow IT," referring to technology, hardware, software, or projects operating beyond the governance of your corporate IT. Initially, this posed a significant security threat to organizational data, but as awareness grew, strategies and solutions emerged to manage and control it effectively. Technological advancements, particularly the widespread adoption of cloud services, ushered in an era of data democratization. This brought numerous benefits to organizations and consumers by increasing access to valuable data, fostering opportunities, and enhancing overall effectiveness.

However, employing the cloud also means data spreads to different places, making it harder to track. We no longer have fully self-contained systems on-site. With more access comes more risk. Now, the threat of unsecured shadow data has appeared. Unlike the relatively contained risks of shadow IT, shadow data stands out as the most significant menace to your data security. 

The common questions that arise:

1. Do you know the whereabouts of your sensitive data?
2. What is this data’s security posture and what controls are applicable? 

3. Do you possess the necessary tools and resources to manage it effectively?

 

Shadow data, a prevalent yet frequently underestimated challenge, demands attention. Fortunately, there are tools and resources you can use in order to secure your data without increasing the burden on your limited staff.

Data Breach Risks Associated with Shadow Data

The risks linked to shadow data are diverse and severe, ranging from potential data exposure to compliance violations. Uncontrolled shadow data poses a threat to data security, leading to data breaches, unauthorized access, and compromise of intellectual property.

The Business Impact of Data Security Threats

Shadow data represents not only a security concern but also a significant compliance and business issue. Attackers often target shadow data as an easily accessible source of sensitive information. Compliance risks arise, especially concerning personal, financial, and healthcare data, which demands meticulous identification and remediation. Moreover, unnecessary cloud storage incurs costs, emphasizing the financial impact of shadow data on the bottom line. Businesses can return investment and reduce their cloud cost by better controlling shadow data.

As more enterprises are moving to the cloud, the concern of shadow data is increasing. Since shadow data refers to data that administrators are not aware of, the risk to the business depends on the sensitivity of the data. Customer and employee data that is improperly secured can lead to compliance violations, particularly when health or financial data is at risk. There is also the risk that company secrets can be exposed. 

An example of this is when Sentra identified a large enterprise’s source code in an open S3 bucket. Part of working with this enterprise, Sentra was given 7 Petabytes in AWS environments to scan for sensitive data. Specifically, we were looking for IP - source code, documentation, and other proprietary data. As usual, we discovered many issues, however there were 7 that needed to be remediated immediately. These 7 were defined as ‘critical’.

The most severe data vulnerability was source code in an open S3 bucket with 7.5 TB worth of data. The file was hiding in a 600 MB .zip file in another .zip file. We also found recordings of client meetings and a 8.9 KB excel file with all of their existing current and potential customer data. Unfortunately, a scenario like this could have taken months, or even years to notice - if noticed at all. Luckily, we were able to discover this in time.

How You Can Detect and Minimize the Risk Associated with Shadow Data

Strategy 1: Conduct Regular Audits

Regular audits of IT infrastructure and data flows are essential for identifying and categorizing shadow data. Understanding where sensitive data resides is the foundational step toward effective mitigation. Automating the discovery process will offload this burden and allow the organization to remain agile as cloud data grows.

Strategy 2: Educate Employees on Security Best Practices

Creating a culture of security awareness among employees is pivotal. Training programs and regular communication about data handling practices can significantly reduce the likelihood of shadow data incidents.

Strategy 3: Embrace Cloud Data Security Solutions

Investing in cloud data security solutions is essential, given the prevalence of multi-cloud environments, cloud-driven CI/CD, and the adoption of microservices. These solutions offer visibility into cloud applications, monitor data transactions, and enforce security policies to mitigate the risks associated with shadow data.

How You Can Protect Your Sensitive Data with Sentra’s DSPM Solution

The trick with shadow data, as with any security risk, is not just in identifying it – but rather prioritizing the remediation of the largest risks. Sentra’s Data Security Posture Management follows sensitive data through the cloud, helping organizations identify and automatically remediate data vulnerabilities by:

  • Finding shadow data where it’s not supposed to be:

Sentra is able to find all of your cloud data - not just the data stores you know about.

  • Finding sensitive information with differing security postures:

Finding sensitive data that doesn’t seem to have an adequate security posture.

  • Finding duplicate data:

Sentra discovers when multiple copies of data exist, tracks and monitors them across environments, and understands which parts are both sensitive and unprotected.

  • Taking access into account:

Sometimes, legitimate data can be in the right place, but accessible to the wrong people. Sentra scrutinizes privileges across multiple copies of data, identifying and helping to enforce who can access the data.

Key Takeaways

Comprehending and addressing shadow data risks is integral to a robust data security strategy. By recognizing the risks, implementing proactive detection measures, and leveraging advanced security solutions like Sentra's DSPM, organizations can fortify their defenses against the evolving threat landscape. 

Stay informed, and take the necessary steps to protect your valuable data assets.

To learn more about how Sentra can help you eliminate the risks of shadow data, schedule a demo with us today.

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Discover Ron’s expertise, shaped by over 20 years of hands-on tech and leadership experience in cybersecurity, cloud, big data, and machine learning. As a serial entrepreneur and seed investor, Ron has contributed to the success of several startups, including Axonius, Firefly, Guardio, Talon Cyber Security, and Lightricks, after founding a company acquired by Oracle.

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Asaf Kochan
Asaf Kochan
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Data Security in 2025: Why DSPM Is Now a Business Imperative

Data Security in 2025: Why DSPM Is Now a Business Imperative

At RSAC 2025, I had the opportunity to speak with Adrian Sanabria about one of the most pressing and complex challenges facing security teams today: data security. Since then, the urgency around the future of data security has only intensified.

We're watching a major inflection point unfold across industries. Organizations are generating and storing more data than ever, while simultaneously adopting AI at a pace that outstrips most security programs. At the same time, regulators are enforcing data privacy with increasing sharpness. These trends all converge on one critical question:

 

Do you know where your sensitive data is - and who can access it?

If the answer is no, then it's time to rethink your approach.

Data is Now The Most Valuable, And Volatile Asset

For years, security tools have operated largely without visibility into the data itself. We've focused on endpoints, perimeters, and identities - all essential layers. But in 2025, that’s no longer sufficient.

Data is now the most valuable, and volatile asset most companies have. We’re seeing this in breach investigations, where the root cause often traces back to unmonitored or duplicated sensitive data left in the wrong place. We're seeing it in AI deployments, where teams rush to fine-tune models or deploy copilots without knowing what's inside the datasets they’re exposing. And we’re certainly seeing it in regulatory fines, many of which stem from nothing more than storing customer data longer than necessary, in the wrong place, or in unsecured formats.

What all of this underscores is a simple truth: you can’t protect what you can’t see.

The Role of DSPM in the Future of Data Security

At Sentra, we’ve built our platform around a core philosophy that Data Security Posture Management (DSPM) is not just a security tool, it’s the future of data security, an enabler of responsible innovation. The foundation starts with sensitive data discovery. Most organizations are surprised by how much sensitive data exists outside expected systems- in backups, temporary stores, or SaaS apps that were never properly offboarded. From there, classification adds context. It’s not enough to label something as “PII”, we need to understand how sensitive it is, who owns it, how it is being used, and how it should be governed.

We built Sentra as a cloud-native solution from day one. That means it works across IaaS, SaaS, PaaS, and even on-prem environments without needing agents or pulling data outside the customer’s environment. That last point is non-negotiable for us. As a security company, we believe strongly that extracting customer data for analysis creates unnecessary risk and liability.

To support classification at scale, especially for unstructured data, we developed our own language models using open-source LLMs. This provides the deep contextual understanding needed to accurately label large volumes of data all while maintaining cost efficiency and avoiding unnecessary compute overhead.

AI, Risk, and Responsibility in Data Securityy

One of the biggest shifts we’re seeing in the market is how AI has elevated data security from a technical concern to a boardroom issue. Security teams are now being asked to approve large-scale data usage for AI training, RAG systems, copilots, and internal assistants. But very few have the tools to answer basic questions about what’s in those datasets.

I’ve worked with customers who only realized after deploying AI that they had been exposing medical records, credentials, or confidential meeting data to the model. Once it’s in, you can’t pull it back. That’s why data classification and risk detection must come before any AI integration.

This is precisely the use case we had in mind when we built Sentra’s Data Security for AI Module. It helps teams scan, assess, and verify the contents of data before it ever touches a model. The goal isn’t to slow down innovation - it’s to make it safer, auditable, and repeatable.

Proactive Risk Management Helps Enterprises Ship Faster

One of the most exciting developments we’ve seen for the future of data security is how quickly Sentra’s data security platform becomes a strategic asset for enterprise data risk management. Time to value is fast in many cases, our customers discover major data risks just days after deployment. But beyond those early wins, the real power lies in alignment.

When security leaders can map data to risk, compliance, and governance frameworks, and do so continuously, they’re no longer operating reactively. They’re enabling the business, helping teams ship faster with fewer unknowns, and building trust around how AI and data are managed.

At scale, this kind of maturity is the difference between organizations that can confidently embrace generative AI and those that will always be playing catch-up.

A Final Word

From my time in the Israeli Defense Forces and Unit 8200 to helping enterprises build modern security programs, I’ve seen one truth over and over again: data left behind is data exposed. The volume may grow, the threats may change, but this principle doesn’t.

In 2025, securing data is no longer an aspiration, it’s a baseline. Whether you’re preparing for your next AI initiative, facing regulatory audits, or just trying to get visibility into sprawling cloud environments, DSPM should be your first step. At Sentra, we’re proud to help lead this change. And we believe the organizations that take control of their data today will be the ones best positioned to lead tomorrow.

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Team Sentra
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Data Blindness: The Hidden Threat Lurking in Your Cloud

Data Blindness: The Hidden Threat Lurking in Your Cloud

“If you don’t know where your sensitive data is, how can you protect it?”

It’s a simple question, but for many security and compliance teams, it’s nearly impossible to answer. When a Fortune 500 company recently paid millions in fines due to improperly stored customer data on an unmanaged cloud bucket, the real failure wasn’t just a misconfiguration. It was a lack of visibility.

Some in the industry are starting to refer to this challenge as "data blindness".

What Is Data Blindness?

Data Blindness refers to an organization’s inability to fully see, classify, and understand the sensitive data spread across its cloud, SaaS, and hybrid environments.

It’s not just another security buzzword. It’s the modern evolution of a very real problem: traditional data protection methods weren’t built for the dynamic, decentralized, and multi-cloud world we now operate in. Legacy DLP tools or one-time audits simply can’t keep up.

Unlike general data security issues, Data Blindness speaks to a specific kind of operational gap: you can’t protect what you can’t see, and most teams today are flying partially blind.

Why Data Blindness Is Getting Worse

What used to be a manageable gap in visibility has now escalated into a full-scale operational risk. As organizations accelerate cloud adoption and embrace SaaS-first architectures, the complexity of managing sensitive data has exploded. Information no longer lives in a few centralized systems, it’s scattered across AWS, Azure, and GCP instances, and a growing stack of SaaS tools, each with its own storage model, access controls, and risk profile.

At the same time, shadow data is proliferating. Sensitive information ends up in collaboration platforms, forgotten test environments, and unsanctioned apps - places that rarely make it into formal security inventories. And with the rise of generative AI tools, a new wave of unstructured content is being created and shared at scale, often without proper visibility or retention controls in place.

To make matters worse, many organizations are still operating with outdated identity and access frameworks. Stale permissions and misconfigured policies allow unnecessary access to critical data, dramatically increasing the potential impact of both internal mistakes and external breaches.

In short, the cloud hasn’t just moved the data, it’s multiplied it, fragmented it, and made it harder than ever to track. Without continuous, intelligent visibility, data blindness becomes the default.

The Hidden Risks of Operating Blind

When teams don’t have visibility into where sensitive data lives or how it moves, the consequences stack up quickly:

  • Compliance gaps: Regulations like GDPR, HIPAA, and PCI-DSS demand accurate data inventories, privacy adherence, and prompt response to DSARs. Without visibility, you risk fines and legal exposure.

  • Breach potential: Blind spots become attack vectors. Misplaced data, overexposed buckets, or forgotten environments are easy targets.

  • Wasted resources: Scanning everything (just in case) is expensive. Without prioritization, teams waste cycles on low-risk data.

  • Trust erosion: Customers expect you to know where their data is and how it’s protected. Data blindness isn’t a good look.

Do You Have Data Blindness? Here Are the Signs

  • Your security team can’t confidently answer, “Where is our most sensitive data and who has access to it?”

  • Data inventories are outdated, or built on manual tagging and spreadsheets.

  • You’re still relying on legacy DLP tools with poor context and high false positives.

  • Incident response is slow because it’s unclear what data was touched or how sensitive it was.

Sound familiar? You’re not alone.

Breaking Free from Data Blindness

Solving data blindness starts with visibility, but real progress comes from turning that visibility into action. Modern organizations need more than one-off audits or static reports. They need continuous data discovery that scans cloud, SaaS, and on-prem environments in real time, keeping up with the constant movement of data.

But discovery alone isn’t enough. Classification must go beyond content analysis, it needs to be context-aware, taking into account where the data lives, who has access to it, how it’s used, and why it matters to the business. Visibility must extend to both structured and unstructured data, since sensitive information often hides in documents, PDFs, chat logs, and spreadsheets. And finally, insights need to be integrated into existing security and compliance workflows. Detection without action is just noise.

How Sentra Solves Data Blindness

At Sentra, we give security and privacy teams the visibility and context they need to take control of their data - without disrupting operations or moving it out of place. Our cloud-native DSPM (Data Security Posture Management) platform scans and classifies data in-place across cloud, SaaS, and on-prem environments, with no agents or data removal required.

Sentra uses AI-powered, context-rich classification to achieve over 95% accuracy, helping teams identify truly sensitive data and prioritize what matters most. We provide full coverage of structured and unstructured sources, along with real-time insights into risk exposure, access patterns, and regulatory posture, all with a cost-efficient scanning model that avoids unnecessary compute usage.

One customer reduced their shadow data footprint by 30% in just a few weeks, eliminating blind spots that their legacy tools had missed for years. That’s the power of visibility, backed by context, at scale.

The Bottom Line: Awareness Is Step One

Data Blindness is real, but it’s also solvable. The first step is acknowledging the problem. The next is choosing a solution that brings your data out of the dark, without slowing down your teams or compromising security.

If you’re ready to assess your current exposure or just want to see what’s possible with modern data security, you can take a free data blindness assessment, or talk to our experts to get started.

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Yoav Regev
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Why Sentra Was Named Gartner Peer Insights Customer Choice 2025

Why Sentra Was Named Gartner Peer Insights Customer Choice 2025

When we started Sentra three years ago, we had a hypothesis: organizations were drowning in data they couldn't see, classify, or protect. What we didn't anticipate was how brutally honest our customers would be about what actually works, and what doesn't.

This week, Gartner named Sentra a "Customer's Choice" in their Peer Insights Voice of the Customer report for Data Security Posture Management. The recognition is based on over 650 verified customer reviews, giving us a 4.9/5 rating with 98% willing to recommend us.

The Accuracy Obsession Was Right

The most consistent theme across hundreds of reviews? Accuracy matters more than anything else.

"97.4% of Sentra's alerts in our testing were accurate! By far the highest percentage of any of the DSPM platforms that we tested."

"Sentra accurately identified 99% of PII and PCI in our cloud environments with minimal false positives during the POC."

But customers don't just want data discovery—they want trustworthy data discovery. When your DSPM tool incorrectly flags non-sensitive data as critical, teams waste time investigating false leads. When it misses actual sensitive data, you face compliance gaps and real risk. The reviews validate what we suspected: if security teams can't trust your classifications, the tool becomes shelf-ware. Precision isn't a nice-to-have—it's everything.

How Sentra Delivers Time-to-Value

Another revelation: customers don't just want fast deployment, they want fast insights.

"Within less than a week we were getting results, seeing where our sensitive data had been moved to."

"We were able to start seeing actionable insights within hours."

I used to think "time-to-value" was a marketing term. But when you're a CISO trying to demonstrate ROI to your board, or a compliance officer facing an audit deadline, every day matters. Speed isn’t a luxury in security, it’s a necessity. Data breaches don't wait for your security tools to finish their months-long deployment cycles. Compliance deadlines don't care about your proof-of-concept timeline. Security teams need to move at the speed of business risk.

The Honesty That Stings (And Helps)

But here's what really struck me: our customers were refreshingly honest about our shortcomings.

"The chatbot is more annoying than helpful."

"Currently there is no SaaS support for something like Salesforce."

"It's a startup so it has all the advantages and disadvantages that those come with."

As a founder, reading these critiques was... uncomfortable. But it's also incredibly valuable. Our customers aren't just users, they're partners in our product evolution. They're telling us exactly where to invest our engineering resources.

The Salesforce integration requests, for instance, showed up in nearly every "dislike" section. Message received. We're shipping SaaS connectors specifically because it’s a top priority for our customers.

What Gartner Customer Choice Trends Reveal About the DSPM Market

Analyzing 650 reviews across 9 vendors revealed something fascinating about our market's maturity. Customers aren't just comparing features, they're comparing outcomes.

The traditional data security playbook focused on coverage: "How many data sources can you scan?" But customers are asking different questions:

  • How accurate are your findings?
  • How quickly can I act on your insights?
  • How much manual work does this actually eliminate?

This shift from inputs to outcomes suggests the DSPM market is maturing rapidly. 

The Gartner Voice of the Customer Validated

Perhaps the most meaningful insight came from what customers didn't say. I expected more complaints about deployment complexity, integration challenges, or learning curves. Instead, review after review mentioned how quickly teams became productive with Sentra.

"It was also the fastest set up."

"Quick setup and responsive support."

"The platform is intuitive and offers immediate insights."

This tells me we're solving a real problem in a way that feels natural to security teams. The best products don't just work, they feel inevitable once you use them.

The Road Ahead: Learning from Gartner Choice Recognition

These reviews crystallized our 2025 roadmap priorities:

1. SaaS-First Expansion: Every customer asked for broader SaaS coverage. We're expanding beyond IaaS to support the applications where your most sensitive data actually lives. Our mission is to secure data everywhere.

2. AI Enhancement: Our classification engine is industry-leading, but customers want more. We're building contextual AI that doesn't just find data, it understands data relationships and business impact.

3. Remediation Automation: Customers love our visibility but want more automated remediation. We're moving beyond recommendations to actual risk mitigation.

A Personal Thank You

To the customers who contributed to our Sentra Gartner Peer Insights success: thank you. Building a startup is often a lonely journey of best guesses and gut instincts. Your feedback is the compass that keeps us pointed toward solving real problems.

To the security professionals reading this: your honest feedback (both praise and criticism) makes our products better. If you're using Sentra, please keep telling us what's working and what isn't. If you're not, I'd love to show you what earned us Customer Choice 2025 recognition and why 98% of our customers recommend us.

The data security landscape is evolving rapidly. But with customers as partners and recognition like Gartner Peer Insights Customer Choice 2025, I'm confident we're building tools that don't just keep up with threats, they help organizations stay ahead of them.

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