Security Luminaries Start RSA on a Data Tip


Symantec  and McAfee , in their
quests to compete for dollars in the market for security technology, are both
using the assets they gleaned from acquisitions in key product releases at
the RSA Conference 2007 in San Francisco today.

Symantec, whose CEO John Thompson will give a keynote speech at the show
tomorrow, has issued new network access control products that dictate who
has access to what data on a corporate network.


The company has upgraded its Symantec Network Access Control (SNAC) 5.1
software to include agentless NAC enforcement, Mac OS X agent support and an
integrated 802.1X supplicant.


The software runs on the Symantec’s Enforcer appliance, which the company purchased when it bought
Sygate in 2005, a machine that helps ensure business networks, branch
offices and mobile employees comply with security policy when accessing
networks from desktops, laptops or handheld computers.


Rich Langston, senior product manager at Symantec, said offering Mac support
will give customers more choices with which to protect their corporate
assets.


SNAC will be available Feb. 7, 2007, directly and through the network of
Symantec’s channel partners, and worldwide in mid-to-late March 2007.


Symantec, which recently bid to buy
Altiris to boost its IT management holdings, expects to compete with Cisco
Systems , Juniper Networks , Extreme
Networks and several other vendors in the NAC space.


Microsoft is also expected to come out strong with its NAC vision, which it
calls Network Access Protection (NAP), when the Windows Server appears later
in 2007.


McAfee meanwhile is no less focused on preventing data from getting into the
wrong hands.


The software maker today took the assets from its acquisition
of Onigma last year and delivered the McAfee Data Loss Prevention (DLP)
Host.


DLP Host, as the name suggests, is host-based, so the agent sits like a
security guard on desktops or laptops to stop the leak of confidential data,
which happens both through malicious and unintentional mishaps.


Vimal Solanki, senior director of product marketing at McAfee, said the DLP
Host prevents data from leaving computers through e-mail, instant messaging,
printed documents, USB drives and CD-ROMs.


“We are all data leakers,” Solanki said. “When we transmit data, we put it
at risk, or when we print something and forget to pick it up, or copy something
onto a USB drive and lose it in an airline seat pocket.”


Careless copying or transmission of data aren’t the only ways data gets
compromised; sometimes disgruntled employees or perpetrators are the
culprits, copying data to USBs and e-mailing them from a Web e-mail account
to competitors.


Protection against such instances, he argued, is something that today’s
security gateways can’t reliably provide from their positions at the edge of
a network.


DLP Host doesn’t just protect assets in the workplace; the software works
for remote users at home or on the road by enforcing data protection
policies even when laptops are disconnected from the corporate network.


Moreover, Solanki said the DLP Host also provides granular policies,
authorizing whether someone is permitted to exchange data via
e-mail, USB devices or Web mail.


Solanki said such features make McAfee like its chances of cracking into the
data leakage market versus vendors WebSense, which recently bought
PortAuthority for data leakage technology, Tablus and Vontu.


“It’s a crowded market, but we believe our solution and our presence and
brand is going to be very well received,” he said.


Regardless of who is offering what, evidence suggests that the data leakage market
will be big; the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse claims more than 100 million data
records of U.S. residents have been exposed due to security breaches since
February 2005.


These data losses have wreaked havoc of some corporate entities, causing
lost revenues, damage to brand reputation and reduced consumer confidence.

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