Drawing on the expertise of Foundstone's consultant founders-- who wrote the best-selling Hacking Exposed--the technology eases the pain of managing a multitude of vulnerabilities in operating systems, network devices and other infrastructure.
Available as software or the FS1000 appliance, Foundstone Enterprise provides an automated system for what can be time-consuming and cumbersome chores for an enterprise: mapping the network, prioritizing assets and probing for vulnerabilities.
At the core of McAfee's Foundstone Enterprise is FoundScan, the original name of Foundstone's vulnerability management solution. FoundScan's accuracy in identifying operating systems and matching vulnerabilities to target systems is top-notch, as is its ability to scan large-scale networks quickly.
The Foundstone technology "sets the standard for accurate assessment of exposures," says one enterprise security manager. More than any other competing product the company tested, it "shows adaptability to our global IP network" and also provides extensive management tools.
Foundstone Enterprise comes with a multi-user, role-based Enterprise Manager Web portal, which allows managers to schedule and monitor local or remote scans--a boon for distributed enterprises. The portal gives managers a lot of flexibility in scheduling and tuning scans so they don't interfere with business operations. Scans can also be configured for specific parts of the network or for certain vulnerabilities.
An optional remediation component helps with one of the biggest headaches of all: making sure critical vulnerabilities are fixed. Based on vulnerabilities discovered in a scan, the module automatically creates tickets, assigns them to the appropriate employee for remediation and provides a way to verify that problems are actually fixed.
Another elective add-on is the threat correlation module, which supplies customers with threat intelligence alerts from the experts at McAfee's labs, giving them a leg up when dealing with breaking events such as Internet worms.
The latest release of Foundstone Enterprise features regulatory compliance templates. The updated software will measure compliance with the vulnerability and configuration aspects of regulations such as SOX, HIPAA and the Payment Card Industry (PCI) standard.
Unified Wireless Network Solution
Cisco Systems
The networking giant may soon be the security giant as well, at least when it comes to keeping wireless networks safe. Cisco Systems' Unified Wireless Network Solution earned top honors grabbing the gold medal in wireless.
Unified Wireless Network Solution is a standards-based wireless LAN security solution designed specifically for large organizations. The offering mitigates sophisticated passive and active wireless LAN attacks, works with a range of client devices, and provides reliable, scalable, centralized security management. Additionally, it's intended to keep the IT staff burden low with administration features that allow network admins to deploy robust yet easy-to-manage security across a network.
The majority of respondents to the Products of the Year survey rated the product good/excellent in all categories, with its marks for overall quality particularly strong.
Other product highlights include support for industry security standards, such as IEEE 802.11i; the Wi-Fi Alliance's Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) and Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA2); 802.1X support for strong, mutual authentication; and dynamic encryption key management and data encryption using Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) and Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP).
With integration in Cisco's Self-Defending Network and Network Admission Control (NAC) initiatives, Unified Wireless Network Solution allows Wi-Fi Certified client devices to provide access control via per-user, per-session mutual authentication and data privacy with strong dynamic encryption. Additionally, the offering comes with an enterprise-class IPS.
Even if a network extends beyond an organization's walls, the product can do the job, thanks in large part to compatibility with Cisco's wireless mesh solution for maintaining indoor/outdoor connectivity.
Cisco made considerable strides in the WLAN market in 2005, with a nod to its $450 million acquisition of WLAN switch startup Airespace last January. The networking giant has held the top spot in the WLAN equipment market for some time, and the latest WLAN market report from Infonetics Research found that Cisco is closing the gap between itself and wireless switch market leader Symbol Technologies.
According to Infonectics, Cisco also leads the overall network hardware and software security market with a 35 percent share, fueled by the growth in IPSes and network access control (NAC) gear.
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AirMagnet Enterprise
AirMagnet
Scanning the air like a hawk, AirMagnet's IDS/IPS product won user support for its overall quality, feature set and documentation.
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SonicWALL TZ 170 Wireless
SonicWALL
SMBs need secure wireless, too. TZ 170 Wireless delivers 802.11b/g service, firewall and VPN. Surveyed users particularly like its performance and feature set.
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Information Security & SearchSecurity.com Products of the year 2006
Emerging Technologies
Key Cog in Compliance
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"Elemental has the most comprehensive overall approach for compliance monitoring, across the board and across platform."
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Elemental Compliance System
Elemental
Financial services companies like Marshall BankFirst need a firm grip on what's going on across their networks, both to satisfy demanding regulatory obligations and to protect their customers' accounts and personally identifiable information.
"Elemental has the most comprehensive overall approach for compliance monitoring, across the board and across platform," says Tyler Brenden, director of IT infrastructure for Marshall, which includes banks in three states and national commercial and residential lending services.
In a year when regulatory compliance seems to dominate the infosecurity market, the integrated policy management, host configuration and network access control in a single offering earned Elemental Compliance System (ECS) the gold medal in emerging technologies. In a category chosen by Information Security and SearchSecurity.com editors, Elemental's innovative approach to a high-profile, enterprise-level security need made it the clear choice.
"Being a bank, we have many federal compliance issues," says Brenden. "Audits always came down to information security policy: 'Prove it. Do you actually implement the policies?' We had to show screen prints and configuration screens. With Elemental, we can define policy and show which devices are in compliance, and the percentage."
Agent-based ECS gives an up-to-date picture of your networks' compliance on demand--by group, by device and by policy. It can monitor compliance for anything from password policy to patch level. ECS provides some 1,700 policy templates based on NSA, Microsoft, DISA and SANS security best practices; SOX, and standard applications such as Internet Explorer, Oracle, Apache, Sendmail and IIS. ECS can enforce as well as monitor policy through several means, including quarantining noncompliant PCs and servers. Marshall is getting ready to implement its initial enforcement procedure for wireless connections.
"We don't allow wireless networks," Brenden declares, "but our workforce has laptops. Our Elemental policy won't allow the device to connect to the network if the wireless card is enabled."
Brenden also likes ECS agents' ability to detect devices on the corporate network by monitoring traffic in and out of the device and putting them into dynamic groups until they can be checked out.
"And it can limit communications between devices," he says. "We can see some important cases for that, particularly not allowing development machines to see data sources."
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HIVE
Sentryware
With attackers swarming over vulnerable Web apps, HIVE creates quite a buzz with its fresh approach to securing online activity. The magic is in its unique technology, which effectively uses application-layer tokens to proxy each Web transaction and validate requests.
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OneSign
Imprivata
OneSign is single sign-on for the rest of us, with an innovative technology that makes adding almost any application a snap, doing away with manually scripted login procedures, and saving time and money.
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Information Security & SearchSecurity.com Products of the year 2006
Methodology:
Choosing Our 2006 Products of the Year
Information Security and SearchSecurity.com presented 890 readers with a survey of more than 300 security products, divided into 12 categories. Respondents were asked to select the products in each category that they use and had the option of specifying products that did not appear on the list. (The categories and product lists were determined by Information Security and SearchSecurity.com editors.) Respondents were asked to rate each product in six areas: overall quality, performance, features, security, documentation and vendor support/service.
In each area, respondents scored the product on a scale of one (poor) to five (excellent). They also had the ability to opt out of scoring in one or more criteria by indicating that they had "no opinion."
Winners were based on cumulative responses for the six criteria. Editors arrived at a product's overall score by calculating the average number of points it received in all of the evaluation areas. In each category, the highest overall score received the gold medal, the next highest earned the silver medal, and the third highest took the bronze medal.
To prevent products that received a small number of high scores from unduly influencing the results, we instituted a vote qualification minimum: In order to be eligible for award consideration, a product had to be among the top five vote getters in its category.
The three finalists in each category represent the top scores from the top five vote-getters. The gold medal winner received the highest score among the three finalists.
The gold medal winner also had to get at least 25 percent of the total votes.
Emerging Technologies awards were determined by Information Security and SearchSecurity.com editors, who chose three innovative technologies that promise to address a critical security need for enterprises and/or SMBs.