New Security Standards for Borderless Organization

VARINDIA- INDIA'S FRONTLINE IT MAGAZINE

New Security Standards for Borderless Organization

Cisco continues to invest in addressing the rapidly-changing security needs of businesses today with the announcement of new context-aware security enforcement across its security portfolio.

The new borderless organizations have dramatically changed the definition of how, when and where people work, causing a need to redefine the way security solutions are built and deployed. Driving this change is a new wave of mobility, virtualization and cloud technologies that have forced IT security administrators to deal with a multidimensional problem and to rethink how security must be implemented and enforced.

Tom Gillis, Vice-President & General Manager, Security Technology Business Unit, Cisco, said, "Today's business environment requires proactive, context-aware security that provides deep insight, control and operational efficiency. Cisco SecureX Architecture and the Cisco ASA with context-aware firewalling represent a significant leap forward in allowing businesses to better embrace increasing mobility, virtualization and collaboration across business boundaries."

To enable companies to conduct business without borders, Cisco is introducing a new highly distributed security architecture that manages enforcement elements like firewalls, Web proxies and intrusion-prevention sensors with a higher-level policy language that is context-aware to accommodate business needs. These next-generation scanning elements are independent of the physical infrastructure and can be deployed as appliances, modules and cloud services. Better suited to address today's security challenges, they are designed to know exactly who a user is, what role that user plays in the organization, and whether that user should be allowed access.

For More Details See
www.varindia.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

N Chandrasekaran appointed chairman of Tata Sons

Fake GST invoice scam; 215 people arrested, ₹700 cr recovered

Visa buys NFT based CryptoPunk and paid $150,000 in Etherium