While many agencies are still licking their wounds from once again failing their annual information security test, the Department of Defense and the National Security Agency on Thursday will announce a new partnership that could go a long way toward shoring . . . . While many agencies are still licking their wounds from once again failing their annual information security test, the Department of Defense and the National Security Agency on Thursday will announce a new partnership that could go a long way toward shoring up the security of the government's networks. The new agreement is a joint research and development initiative with Lancope Inc., to build an advanced intrusion-detection appliance for use both inside the government and in the private sector. Code-named the Therminator, the appliance will incorporate Lancope's StealthWatch, behavior-based IDS system with a new data-reduction and visualization technology developed by the government. Perhaps indicating the government's current emphasis on information security, the organizations have set forth an aggressive development schedule and are hoping to deploy a prototype appliance within six months. The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . While many agencies are still licking their wounds from once again failing their annual information . their, while, agencies, still, licking, wounds, again, failing, annual, information. . Anthony Pell
The system promises to protect networks by constantly rotating their IP addresses, making them a moving target for would-be hackers. The one-time head of the KGB's overseas code-scrambling unit and an ex-director of the CIA have teamed up to develop what . . . . The system promises to protect networks by constantly rotating their IP addresses, making them a moving target for would-be hackers. The one-time head of the KGB's overseas code-scrambling unit and an ex-director of the CIA have teamed up to develop what they call a revolutionary way of hiding Internet communications from prying eyes and would-be intruders. The system can change cyber addresses as often as once a second, cloaking them from all but authorized parties, said Victor Sheymov, founder, president, and chief executive of Invicta Networks. The link for this article located at TechTV is no longer available. . The system promises to protect networks by constantly rotating their IP addresses, making them a mov. system, promises, protect, networks, constantly, rotating, their, addresses, making. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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