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Guard your data against insider threats

 

Vontu 5.0

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Vontu 4.0 established a tough benchmark the last time I looked at data-loss prevention solutions; it tested excellent in protecting customer data, preventing information disclosure, and ensuring compliance with government regulations. Vontu 5.0 adds a missing piece: Vontu Discover scans files shares, Web content servers, and desktops for exposed confidential data, further reducing enterprises' risk.

Additionally, this updated version addresses global requirements for workplace privacy. For example, the system captures only data that violates company policy -- without revealing employee identity -- to meet European Union legal requirements. Existing functions were refreshed along the same line; role-based access controls prohibit investigators in a business unit from seeing incidents in another part of your organization. Combined with already fine accuracy, predefined policies, and scalability, Vontu 5.0 sets another standard.

Vontu renamed some functions and made Version 5.0 more modular, which gives enterprises more deployment flexibility. But the underlying two-tier architecture remains and contributes to this solution's scalability. Sitting on a secure corporate LAN, Vontu Enforce is the core management server. Also here is Vontu Discover. On the outer tier, Vontu Monitor scans network traffic while Vontu Prevent integrates with mail gateways to block transmissions of confidential data.

Importantly, Vontu Enforce allows you to centrally define and implement policies across multiple Discover, Monitor, and Prevent systems. Vontu's well-done user interface also delivers easy access to reporting and remediation functions.

As previously, Vontu 5.0 offers both prebuilt templates -- more than 50 for industry and government regulations -- and a simple-to-use policy builder. Templates for HIPAA, GLBA, CA 1386, and Visa PCI (Payment Card Industry) saved me a lot of time and possibly oversights because they are complete out-of-the-box. Yet I had no trouble adapting these standard policies to create company-specific rules.

On the detection side, Vontu handles both structured and unstructured data. The system relies on keywords, lexicons, pattern matching, indexed-document matching -- for fingerprinting whole or document fragments -- and exact-data matching (to handle databases of customer, patient, and employee information accurately). Used in combination, Vontu had little trouble detecting data-loss incidents. There were no false negatives and very few false positives.

Vontu Monitor's real-time network scanning worked across all the major business network protocols I tested, and it inspected Webmail, IM, and FTP transfers without any problem.

Moreover, when Enforce spots a policy infraction, the system gives enterprises many options. At the minimum level, I notified those who violated a policy; this alone can change employee behavior and help enforce compliance. Vontu then classifies each incident by severity.

Compared with the previous version, Vontu 5.0's real-time dashboards give executives even better insight into these trends, such as incidents by their business unit or departments. This doesn't take any special customization because Vontu integrates with active directory and respects access control privileges.

Role-based access extends throughout the system -- security and flexibility that betters the other products. For instance, I set up a role where certain investigators could only review incidents that violated customer data policies, another role for violations of HR policies, and a third "manager" role that received incidents that were escalated by the original analyst.

Within some of these roles I further limited access to attributes of the incident, such as hiding the sender's identity, which is critical for safeguarding employee privacy. Yet in each situation, analysts received the necessary information to see why the communication generated the incident, while Vontu's workflow ensured that it was handled by the appropriate person.

Still, I found you can confidently let Vontu run unattended. When I added Vontu Prevent into the mix, it automatically, and accurately, blocked e-mail and Web communications that contained confidential data. Alternately, based on policies I created, Prevent routed messages to an encryption gateway for secure delivery.

Discover applies Vontu's detection techniques and data security policies to networked servers and other spots where documents are stored. Without installing any agents, Discover quickly scanned several file shares, document management repositories, and desktops.

Vontu continues to be the standard-bearer in detecting and mitigating insider security risks. Enterprises can implement this solution in various ways -- from simple audits to give you a baseline risk profile all the way to full blocking of communications. This version's improvements in protecting personal privacy, finding noncompliant data-at-rest, and established accuracy represent a compelling mix.

Insiders, beware

Plugging data leakage is no longer a low-priority project for the corporate security department. It's one of the top 10 CEO challenges for 2006 and should be on the minds of every other executive, shareholder, board member, and employee.

Although no technology can guarantee 100 percent compliance, these four vendors show they know how to abate insider threats. Their products provide strong visibility and control over confidential information flowing over your networks -- and now on the desktop and internal servers. Still, with this awesome control comes the next beachhead: personal privacy.

Content Alarm 3.0 sets ambitious goals of network and desktop protection, while monitoring for and preventing leaks, which will put other vendors on notice if delivered. Tablus Content Sentinel, meanwhile, performs adequately in finding exposed data at rest.

I like Oakley SureView for its straightforward deployment model and flexible rules. Just slightly ahead is Reconnex, because of its improved reporting and forensic capabilities.

Although Vontu may be a bit more complex to setup, owing to various hardware components, the payoff is smooth, centralized operation, while leaving no exit points uncovered. Yet what edges this solution ahead are its privacy safeguards along with a lack of noticeable functional gaps.


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Oakley Networks SureView 3.3

Oakley Networks , http://oakleynetworks.com

Excellent  8.8
criteria score weight
Ease-of-use 9 20%
Features 9 20%
Performance 9 20%
Reliability 9 20%
Scalability 8 10%
Value 8 10%

Cost:
Agent, $45 per seat for 5,000 users; server, $7,500 per appliance (supports 500 agents)

Bottom Line:
Encompassing agents and SureView Server, Oakley’s solution provisions policies over your network. Based on granular rules, agents monitor all insider-threat channels, including encrypted communications and data transfer. The system’s strong content and behavioral analytics reduce false alerts. When detecting legitimate threats, data is sent to the server for later examination; blocking and workstation lockout is also possible on the spot.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



Reconnex iGuard 2.1

Reconnex, http://reconnex.net

Excellent  8.9
criteria score weight
Ease-of-use 9 20%
Features 9 20%
Performance 9 20%
Reliability 9 20%
Scalability 9 10%
Value 8 10%

Cost:
$70,000

Platforms:
64-bit information security appliance

Bottom Line:
iGuard 2.1 monitors network traffic, providing real-time analysis of all protocols and content types for policy violation. Dashboard reporting, personalized by roles, shows high-level threat trends and details of all incidents. Customized rules cover organizational and federal regulations. Moreover, this version shows data that triggered a policy violation, resolves IP address to a known host name and geography, and speeds searches.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



Tablus Content Alarm 3.0 Beta

Tablus, Inc., http://tablus.com

Beta  

Cost:
Starts at $25,000

Platforms:
Hardened Linux appliances

Bottom Line:
Tablus has evolved Content Alarm to catch security breaches at multiple exit points. The new Content Alarm DT controls confidential information at the desktop by selectively preventing actions such as moving data to USB drives. The main Content Alarm 3.0 network scanner adds executive dashboards, enterprise incident management, and bundles policy modules. Importantly, this integrated solution provides central management of policies and consolidated reporting.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



Vontu 5.0

Vontu, http://vontu.com

Excellent  9.1
criteria score weight
Ease-of-use 9 20%
Features 10 20%
Performance 9 20%
Reliability 9 20%
Scalability 9 10%
Value 8 10%

Cost:
Starts at $100,000, based on number of users and number of exit points monitored

Platforms:
Distributed, two-tier architecture based on Vontu Enforce platform

Bottom Line:
Vontu finds confidential information on file servers and PCs, monitors network traffic, stops transmission of restricted data, and enforces security and encryption policies. The solution starts with Vontu Enforce server; three optional modules — Vontu Discover, Monitor, and Prevent — can be deployed stand-alone or in combination. Vontu 5.0 stands apart with blocking, scalability, finding data at rest, and adhering to privacy safeguards.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology



 


 
Mike Heck is a contributing editor for the InfoWorld Test Center.
 

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