To help enterprises that are battling network threats on multiple fronts (worms to spam to application vulnerabilities) several hardware vendors are now offering ISGs that combine an arsenal of security capabilities -- such as intrusion detection and prevention, virus scanning, spam blocking and Web content filtering -- in a single box. Many integrated products also incorporate a firewall and VPN support. . . .
Security | Like the mozzies that relentlessly swarm across the 49th US state every summer, plagues of viruses and hack attacks continuously assault the University of Alaska-Anchorage's network. The school's CIO, Richard Whitney, hates hackers as much as he hates insects that bite. That's why, like a growing number of CIOs, he's decided to take an aggressive, "Swiss Army knife" approach to network defence by installing an integrated security gateway (ISG). "We like the idea of [having] intrusion detection, firewalling and inbound virus detection in one box," he says. "Most CIOs are in a position today where they're being forced [by cost and convenience issues] to consider this [approach] really seriously."

To help enterprises that are battling network threats on multiple fronts (worms to spam to application vulnerabilities) several hardware vendors are now offering ISGs that combine an arsenal of security capabilities -- such as intrusion detection and prevention, virus scanning, spam blocking and Web content filtering -- in a single box. Many integrated products also incorporate a firewall and VPN support.

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