Symantec Announces New Intrusion Prevention Solution For Desktops And Servers
June 14th, 2005 Leave a comment Visited 35 times, 1 so far today
Symantec Announces New Intrusion Prevention Solution For Desktops And Servers
Symantec Corp. (NASDAQ: SYMC), the global leader in information security, today announced Symantec Critical System Protection 4.5, a comprehensive intrusion prevention solution for desktops and servers on Windows, UNIX and Linux platforms. Scheduled to be available later this month, Symantec Critical System Protection defends against day-zero attacks, maintains system compliance, and proactively protects applications and the operating system on clients and servers by enforcing behavior-based security policies.
“Symantec Critical System Protection demonstrates our commitment to providing customers with the most innovative and effective protection for endpoint clients and servers,†said Chirantan “CJ†Desai, director of product management for client and host security at Symantec. “With this solution, Symantec extends the endpoint security infrastructure by adding a layer of robust protection against new malicious threats.â€
When deployed alongside Symantec Client Security or Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition, Symantec Critical System Protection specifically safeguards applications and operating systems without the need for updates. It delivers powerful behavior-based intrusion prevention technology to protect clients and servers against unknown malicious behavior. Buffer overflow and memory-based attack protection provide added defense against the most sophisticated attacks, while a high-performance firewall monitors network traffic with the ability to block inbound and outbound connections by port, protocol and IP address range.
“Even during our profiling period, Symantec Critical System Protection has shown real value in its ability to identify malicious activity that slipped through other layers of protection,†reports Kenneth Brothers, manager of Information Security at the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York. “In one specific example, it identified a ‘day-zero virus’ before an antivirus signature was available.â€
|
TechWhack on Facebook
|
