Nice article from a press release at Interop. What kind of virtualization security does Linux have, and how does it compare? What steps do people take to secure their virtual servers? Ultrasecure operating system maker Green Hills Software is quietly providing some major network equipment manufacturers with an extra layer of security for its devices. Green Hills, which last fall released a commercial version of its hardened Integrity-178B operating system used in military fighter planes, is now leveraging that technology for the network, as well. Company officials here revealed they have built a secure virtualization platform for networking equipment based on a combination of the company's secure OS virtualization and networking technologies. . "Connecting our secure operating system environment to networking equipment, which is not secure" didn't make sense, says Dan Mender, vice president of business development for Green Hills. So the company has built a secure, virtualized networking platform based on its hardened Integrity OS plus its own switching and routing software -- a combination that Green Hills say protects network devices from denial-of-service, buffer overflow, and other attacks. Susan Hares, director of networking solutions for Green Hills, says this secure virtualization approach for networking equipment is crucial to protecting switches, routers, firewalls, and other network devices from attack. "Network attacks are coming -- it has just been considered bad form to make a lot of noise about it," she says. "The domino effect of [an attack on a network device] can be quite serious." . 'Connecting our secure operating system environment to networking equipment, which is not secure' di. article, press, release, interop, virtualization, security, linux. . Anthony Pell
Last weekend's CodeCon conference in San Francisco saw the launch of Tinfoil Hat Linux, a self-proclaimed "exercise in over engineering" and security. What started out as a secure, single floppy, bootable Linux distribution for storing PGP keys, and encrypting, signing and . . . . Last weekend's CodeCon conference in San Francisco saw the launch of Tinfoil Hat Linux, a self-proclaimed "exercise in over engineering" and security. What started out as a secure, single floppy, bootable Linux distribution for storing PGP keys, and encrypting, signing and wiping files, turned into a useable Linux distribution for the totally paranoid. The homepage for Tinfoil Hat Linux claims that the distribution is effective if customers are using a computer that could have a keystroke logger installed, or if they need to use personal PGP keys at work, school or at a web hosting facility where they don't trust or own the equipment. The link for this article located at vnunet is no longer available. . Aluminum Shield OS debuted at TechFest focuses on heightened safety and confidentiality for individuals requiring secure settings.. Tinfoil Hat Linux, Privacy Protection, Encryption Tools, Secure OS, CodeCon. . Anthony Pell
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