Sana Tracks Emerging Threats
“One thing going on right now,” says John Zicker,
CEO of Sana Security (http://www.sanasecurity.com), “is that an intrusion such as a buffer overflow or
code injection attack is no longer a single attack—it's
made up of multiple variants that each look a little different.” These types of multipronged attacks are harder
for signature-based antivirus products to keep up with
because they require antivirus software vendors to create
and distribute multiple signatures, instead of just one, to all
their customers. And according to Sana's findings, 70 to 75
percent of malware is introduced into a network in this way.
Sana's technology for intrusion detection looks at
the behavior of an application to determine whether it's valid software or malware. So, that application doesn't need to be continually updated with new signatures. A new product offering, Primary
Response Memory Shield, takes a subset of the technology found in existing Sana products that
detects these types of attacks and packages it at a lower price point aimed at small-to-midsized
businesses (SMBs) or at less-critical servers in larger companies.
An upcoming Sana product is the Active Malware Detection Technology Center, a Web-based
portal that Zicker says will give subscribers visibility into threats as they emerge and that will be
priced for SMBs on up.
—Renee Munshi
See Associated Figure
iQstor Makes
Storage Solutions
Simple and Easy
to Use
Early in iQstor Networks'
(http://www.iqstor.com) existence, this storage vendor looked
at the storage landscape and realized that the small-to-midsized
enterprise (SME) and small-to-midsized business (SMB) segments were underserved—and
that situation remains unchanged
today. In fact, IDC predicts that
network storage will become a
$5.7 billion market opportunity in
the SME space by 2010. But to
tap into this market, you have to
understand the customer.
I talked with iQstor's Director
of Marketing, Albert Saraie, and
he told me that iQstor knows that
SMBs and SMEs often lack the
financial resources and IT staff
depth and experience that enterprise companies boast. All iQstor
products are developed around
the needs of SMBs and SMEs, and
thus are easy to use and to manage. iQstor's new iQ2880 4GB FC
Storage System is a high-performance 4GB Fibre Channel storage
system with storage functionality
such as virtualization, snapshot
capability, replication, and provisioning. “This all-in-one solution
is also much cheaper than what
you'll see in the market,” says
Saraie. I asked him how iQstor is
able to build this solution, with all
its functionality, at a much lower
price point than its competition. He
replied that the answer is simple:
“We own the technology.”
—Blake Eno
See Associated Figure
On the Road Toward More Intelligent Software
Have you ever asked yourself why enterprise networks are so difficult to manage? I recently
spoke with Jay Litkey, CEO of Embotics Corporation (http://www.embotics.com), about that very question. According to Jay, three factors contribute to the problem of manageability: First, virtually all enterprise management infrastructure is based on client-server architecture; second, the
necessity for human interaction results in compromised availability while technicians diagnose and
solve problems; and third, in-band management solutions necessarily rely on a functioning OS.
The solution to the problem is to create software
that can function autonomously and make decisions. In
2001, IBM started an initiative to create self-managing,
self-correcting computer systems to counteract the problem of computers' rapidly growing complexity. IBM called
this initiative Autonomic Computing. With roots in telecom
computing, Embotics follows the autonomic model by
creating solutions that liberate admins from having to run
around fixing things. By using remote management cards
in servers and virtual partitions in workstations, Embotics
software runs where it won't be affected when systems go down. The software's automated management functions are based on policy standards that map to Microsoft's
Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), resulting in independent,
self-healing systems.
—Dianne Russell
End of Article