Data protection in Amazon CloudWatch Logs - Amazon CloudWatch Logs
Services or capabilities described in Amazon Web Services documentation might vary by Region. To see the differences applicable to the China Regions, see Getting Started with Amazon Web Services in China (PDF).

Data protection in Amazon CloudWatch Logs

Note

In addition to the following information about general data protection in Amazon, CloudWatch Logs also enables you to protect sensitive data in log events by masking it. For more information, see Help protect sensitive log data with masking.

The Amazon shared responsibility model applies to data protection in Amazon CloudWatch Logs. As described in this model, Amazon is responsible for protecting the global infrastructure that runs all of the Amazon Web Services Cloud. You are responsible for maintaining control over your content that is hosted on this infrastructure. You are also responsible for the security configuration and management tasks for the Amazon Web Services services that you use. For more information about data privacy, see the Data Privacy FAQ.

For data protection purposes, we recommend that you protect Amazon Web Services account credentials and set up individual users with Amazon IAM Identity Center or Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM). That way, each user is given only the permissions necessary to fulfill their job duties. We also recommend that you secure your data in the following ways:

  • Use multi-factor authentication (MFA) with each account.

  • Use SSL/TLS to communicate with Amazon resources. We require TLS 1.2 and recommend TLS 1.3.

  • Set up API and user activity logging with Amazon CloudTrail. For information about using CloudTrail trails to capture Amazon activities, see Working with CloudTrail trails in the Amazon CloudTrail User Guide.

  • Use Amazon encryption solutions, along with all default security controls within Amazon Web Services services.

  • Use advanced managed security services such as Amazon Macie, which assists in discovering and securing sensitive data that is stored in Amazon S3.

  • If you require FIPS 140-3 validated cryptographic modules when accessing Amazon through a command line interface or an API, use a FIPS endpoint. For more information about the available FIPS endpoints, see Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-3.

We strongly recommend that you never put confidential or sensitive information, such as your customers' email addresses, into tags or free-form text fields such as a Name field. This includes when you work with CloudWatch Logs or other Amazon Web Services services using the console, API, Amazon CLI, or Amazon SDKs. Any data that you enter into tags or free-form text fields used for names may be used for billing or diagnostic logs. If you provide a URL to an external server, we strongly recommend that you do not include credentials information in the URL to validate your request to that server.

Encryption at rest

CloudWatch Logs protects data at rest using encryption. All log groups are encrypted. By default, the CloudWatch Logs service manages the server-side encryption and uses server-side encryption with 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard Galois/Counter Mode (AES-GCM) to encrypt log data at rest.

If you want to manage the keys used for encrypting and decrypting your logs, use Amazon KMS keys. For more information, see Encrypt log data in CloudWatch Logs using Amazon Key Management Service.

Encryption in transit

CloudWatch Logs uses end-to-end encryption of data in transit. The CloudWatch Logs service manages the server-side encryption keys.