VMware, a maker of software that enables computers to run multiple operating systems simultaneously, is working on a new product to make it secure for corporations to open their networks to contractors or telecommuters . . .. The EMC subsidiary plans to announce on Monday a test version of Assured Computing Environment, which lets an outside computer run a second instance of Windows that can be locked down to prevent unauthorized copying or network access. ACE will be shipped by the end of the year, said Michael Mullany, vice president of marketing at VMware. Without something like ACE, a company would have to supply a remote user or contractor with an entirely separate computer, Mullany said. "It allows you to completely control the user environment at a very fundamental level," he said. To keep proprietary information from spreading to computers outside a company, ACE can be configured to block access to USB memory devices, floppy drives, printers or other devices that could be used to save or print information stored on corporate networks. In addition, it enables outsiders use a company's approved software collection, making it harder for foreign computers to infect corporate networks with viruses or other dangerous software. The link for this article located at Stephen Shankland CNET News.com is no longer available. . VMware unveils Verified Operation Framework to enhance network security for remote employees and freelancers reliably.. VMware, Assured Computing Environment, remote work security, data safeguard, corporate solutions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
As spam continues to roll over corporate networks in ever-larger quantities, the cavalry of vendors offering defenses continues to grow as well. No fewer than five vendors are shipping or are about to release new products designed to keep spam . . . . As spam continues to roll over corporate networks in ever-larger quantities, the cavalry of vendors offering defenses continues to grow as well. No fewer than five vendors are shipping or are about to release new products designed to keep spam from polluting corporate e-mail systems. This week, MailFrontier plans to release a gateway product and upgrades to its client software at the Demo 2003 conference, which is being held in Scottsdale, Ariz., and run by IDG Executive Forums, a division of Network World. Also this week, Sunbelt Software will unveil the server Latest News about Servers edition of its IHateSpam filtering software. Singlefin last week introduced its Local Messaging Switch, a corporate gateway spam filter. Stealth start-up Q-Spam will announce its new name and product in March, and TumbleWeed in April is expected to release a new spam module for its SecureMail product. The spate of products not only highlights the options that companies have for building perimeter defenses against spam, but also reinforces the commonly held notion that spammers remain a step ahead. Spam blocker Postini reports that it filtered more than 600 million spam messages in the last 30 days, more than a 50% jump from just five months ago. . As spam continues to roll over corporate networks in ever-larger quantities, the cavalry of vendors . continues, corporate, networks, ever-larger, quantities, cavalry, vendors. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.