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 TitleDate AddedCompany
whitepaper Remote Deposit Capture: A win for banks, credit unions and businesses2007-09-04 IBM
  The days of last-minute runs to the bank are coming to an end, thanks to Remote Deposit Capture (RDC). In this ForwardView webshow, IBM shows how this powerful new tool enables merchants and other commercial customers to deposit checks electronically, making banking more convenient and improving overall cash flow.

This webshow was featured in ForwardView, the premier IBM eMagazine that provides growing businesses with the latest news and trends at the nexus of business and IT. It's full of thought leadership and marketplace insight applied to real business problems.

Tags: Bank Management, Policy Document Management, SSL - TLS, Planning and Services
  
whitepaper TechNet Webcast: 2008 Defense in Depth Security Series (Part 5 of 8): Keeping Your House in Order (Level 200)2008-01-14 Microsoft Tips
  The presenter of this webcast takes a look at technologies and concepts such as IP Security (IPSec) Domain Isolation and Network Access Protection (NAP). The presenter also looks into some practical things that one should be doing right now to protect one of the most valuable assets.

Tags: Security Management
  
whitepaper Capital Securities Corporation Protects Clients With Check Point2008-01-10 Check Point Software Technologies
  A leader in Taiwan's competitive securities industry, Capital Securities Corporation currently ranks fourth in market share. Since maintaining customer confidence is vital to Capital Securities' success, it takes many steps to ensure its VIP clientele benefit from the most secure environment possible for electronic transactions. Capital Securities needed a cost-effective, all-in-one, reliable and flexible Internet security and VPN solution that is easy to deploy and manage. It is at this point Capital Securities turned to Check Point and its Safe@Office 500 product line. Designed for the small business, Safe@Office 500W Unified Threat Management appliance delivers proven Internet security by incorporating the same patented technologies used by 98 percent of the Fortune 500.

Tags: Security Management
  
whitepaper Top 10 Email Security Challenges - and Solutions - for 2008 and Beyond2008-01-09 Proofpoint
  Email security remains one of the top enterprise IT priorities for 2008. Do your New Year's resolutions include keeping your messaging systems safe from spam or preventing leaks of your organization's most valuable data?

Hear Proofpoint product expert Nithin Rao discuss the most critical email security challenges that companies will face in 2008 - as well as the hottest messaging-related trends and most promising solutions for tackling those challenges in the New Year and beyond.

Listen to the web seminar replay, "Top 10 Email Security Challenges - and Solutions - for 2008 and Beyond" (originally presented January 9, 2008) and learn:
  • How to ensure the availability and scalability of your mission critical messaging systems in the face of rising spam volumes.
  • How to improve your organization's effectiveness against the newest forms of spam.
  • Why organizations in every industry - not just healthcare and financial services - are becoming more concerned about protecting sensitive data.
  • How to incorporate email encryption as a component of your organization's overall security architecture.
  • How to make sense of appliance, service and software deployment models - and choose the ideal solution for your enterprise.
  • How new technologies like virtualization are revolutionizing email security.
  • How to leverage your end-user community to reduce email security costs.
  • Strategies for reducing email administration and reporting burdens.
  • How to cope with evolving email security needs as your organization grows.
  • Preparing for future threats - and how to "future-proof" your messaging systems


Tags: Data Center, Data Recovery - Security, Email, Spam - E-mail Fraud - Phishing
  
whitepaper MSDN Webcast: geekspeak: CardSpace, Why Should You Care, Who's Using It Today, and How? (Level 300)2008-01-02 Microsoft Tips
  The presenter of this webcast discusses real-world implementation considerations around Windows CardSpace.

Tags: Security Management, Security Tools
  
whitepaper Local Authority Improves ICT Services for Schools, Boosting Classroom Innovation2008-01-01 Microsoft
  Warwickshire Local Authority sought to improve its managed ICT service for schools by streamlining application delivery and improving security for remote access to school networks. Now, IT technicians are freed up to focus on delivering better support, and teachers can easily evaluate innovative new software on school computers with Microsoft SoftGrid Application Virtualization. Microsoft Intelligent Application Gateway 2007 helps to ensure security.

Tags: Security Management, Virtualization
  
whitepaper Intelligence and Identity2008-01-01 Oracle
  When one is deploying Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition, how one handles identity management is as important as query speed and the quality of the data. A well-architected identity management solution ensures that the users are set up automatically when they first join the organization, that they can quickly access applications and data appropriate for their varied roles, and that personal details and access privileges can be easily managed. This paper focuses on integrating Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition with two of Oracle's flagship identity management tools: Oracle Internet Directory and Oracle Application Server Single Sign-On. The user will see how to combine the security features of Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition and Oracle Identity Management to provide granular, secure access to data.

Tags: Security Management, Business Intelligence - Data Warehousing
  
whitepaper Towards a High-Speed Router-Based Anomaly/Intrusion Detection System2008-01-01 Northwestern University
  Traffic anomalies and attacks are commonplace in today's networks, and identifying them rapidly and accurately is critical for large networks. With the rapid growth of network bandwidth and fast emergence of new attacks/worms, existing network Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS) are insufficient for the following two reasons. First, they are mostly host-based or located on low-end routers, and not scalable to high-speed networks. However, it is crucial to identify fast propagation of worms in their early phases, which can only possibly be achieved by detection at high speed edge/backbone routers instead of at end hosts. Unfortunately, the existing schemes are not scalable to the link speeds and number of flows for high-speed networks.

Tags: Security Tools, Intrusion Detection Systems
  
whitepaper Secure "Selecticast" for Collaborative Intrusion Detection Systems2008-01-01 Columbia University
  The problem domain of Collaborative Intrusion Detection Systems (CIDS) introduces distinctive data routing challenges, which the paper shows are solvable through a sufficiently flexible publish-subscribe system. CIDS share intrusion detection data among organizations, usually to predict impending attacks earlier and more accurately, e.g., from Internet worms that tend to attack many sites at once. CIDS participants collect lists of suspect IP addresses, and want to be notified if others are suspicious of the same addresses. The matching must be done efficiently and anonymously, as most organizations are reluctant to share potentially revealing information about their networks. Alerts regarding external probes should only be visible to other CIDS participants experiencing probes from the same source(s).

Tags: Security Tools, Intrusion Detection Systems
  
whitepaper A Target-Centric Ontology for Intrusion Detection2008-01-01 university of maryland
  This paper has produced an ontology specifying a model of computer attacks. The ontology is based upon an analysis of over 4,000 classes of computer intrusions and their corresponding attack strategies and is categorized according to: system component targeted, means of attack, consequence of attack and location of attacker. The author argues that any taxonomic characteristics used to define a computer attack be limited in scope to those features that are observable and measurable at the target of the attack. The paper presents the model as a target-centric ontology that is to be refined and expanded over time. The benefits of forgoing dependence are stated upon taxonomies, in favor of ontologies, for the classification of computer attacks and intrusions.

Tags: Security Tools, Intrusion Detection Systems