Juniper Expands Security Portfolio with Mykonos Acquisition

Juniper Networks (NYSE:JNPR) is expanding its security portfolio this week with the acquisition of network security vendor Mykonos. Juniper is paying $80 million in cash for the privately company and, in the short term, has committed to retaining the existing Mykonos brand.

Mykonos has a software platform that goes beyond what a traditional Web application firewall (WAF) is able to do. According to David Koretz, chairman and CEO at Mykonos, traditional WAFs don’t do an adequate job of protecting applications and he considers his product to be antithetical to WAFs. “WAF from a real-life security standpoint is next to useless,” Koretz told InternetNews.com. “The problem with them is that they are primarily built on signatures, which limit you to yesterday’s attacks.”

Mykonos helps to detect an attacker earlier in the process when the initial reconnaissance is happening — as an attacker goes through an app looking for holes, they will trip the various traps that Mykonos has set.

“The system is behavioral so it doesn’t matter whether or not there is a signature for it, we’re going to see bad behavior,” Koretz said. “While there are an infinite number of potential signatures, there are only a finite number of behaviors.”

According to Koretz, the Mykonos system can detect a single attacker all the way to the device level and respond to the attack.

Read the full story at EnterpriseNetworkingPlanet:
Juniper Acquires Mykonos for Network Security Technology

Sean Michael Kerner is a senior editor at InternetNews.com, the news service of the IT Business Edge Network, the network for technology professionals. Follow him on Twitter @TechJournalist.

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