Posts Tagged ‘Enterprise’

Why On-demand is the Future of Enterprise Software?

1. Time to value – with no up front capital investments and a 30-days unlimited trial period, customers can instantly gain business value and enjoy the benefits of the on-demand software. The implementation of an on-demand solution is notably shorter then implementing an on-premise solution.

2. Financial Simplicity – most on-demand offerings are based on a monthly subscription fee, aligned with the type of solution delivered (per seat, per transaction, per usage, and a couple of other experimental pricing models). The financial benefits of on-demand delivery model includes:

# No more up-front capital investments to purchase software licenses

# No more annual maintenance contracts with no exit clauses

# No need for purchasing and maintaining expensive servers.

# No software to install, manage, patch or upgrade

# In most cases, no consultants or integrators to tie it all together and go through months of implementations.

# No electricity, cooling or networking equipment upgrades.

3. No servers or software to maintain

Maintaining hardware and software is gone with the on-demand model. Many IT organizations are spending a great amount of time on managing expensive servers and software, dealing with staging environments and software upgrades, constantly patching software and servers to apply security patches and software fixes, all of which are not directly contributing to extracting more business value from the IT organization.

4. Vendor accountability

Traditional software delivery model benefited mostly the software vendors. Once the perpetual contract is signed and the ISV got paid (up front in many cases), he is off the hook. In the on-demand era, on-demand vendors must meet customer needs and earn his business every hour, day and month. This creates a tremendous challenge on the vendors, but serves as a great benefit to the customer. On-demand vendors are tuned to providing the best service for the customer needs and making constant improvements to their service and product offering, otherwise they won’t be in business for long.

5. High reliability & Security

This is often viewed as the Achilles’ heel of the on-demand model and wrongfully so in my opinion. Service delivery, high availability, security and SLA are all rooted in the DNA of an on-demand vendor. Most of the vendors today use SAS70 certified data-centers, 24×7 monitoring solutions and the latest and greatest security technologies, and are always on the lookout for the industry best practices that helps ensure security and SLA.

6. New functionality – no more software upgrades

One of the true beauties of the on-demand business is that the vendor can roll out new software functionality to his entire customer base very easily. As new versions of software are seamlessly available on-demand after the vendor releases a new version, customers can focus their resources on taking immediate business advantage from the new software functionality, instead of dealing with upgrade or patching cycles.

7. Always using the latest software release One of the biggest challenges of traditional software vendors is supporting multiple releases of their own products (and arm-wrestling customers to upgrade to the latest release so they can drop-support for old releases – “are you still using NT4.0″ ?), and testing new releases on multiple infrastructure scenarios that exist at customer premises (operating system, databases, application servers, programming languages, networking equipment and others). With the on-demand model, the vendor supports just a single version of his product (the latest release), and have to test and certify his product on a single infrastructure configuration – his own hosted infrastructure (and if needed, make changes to his infrastructure). For the vendor, the on-demand model greatly simplifies support and maintenance of product releases, and he can dedicate the sudden burst of free time to…. building new features and bringing more value to the customers.

To learn more about on-demand visit SAManage www.SAManage.com and learn about the benefits of using our IT Asset Management service and how it could help you better manage your IT Assets.

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Network Security Model – Defining an Enterprise Security Strategy

Overview

These are the 5 primary security groups that should be considered with any enterprise security model. These include security policy, perimeter, network, transaction and monitoring security. These are all part of any effective company security strategy. Any enterprise network has a perimeter that represents all equipment and circuits that connect to external networks both public and private. The internal network is comprised of all the servers, applications, data, and devices used for company operations. The demilitarized zone (DMZ) represents a location between the internal network and the perimeter comprised of firewalls and public servers. It that allows some access for external users to those network servers and denies traffic that would get to internal servers. That doesn’t mean that all external users will be denied access to internal networks. On the contrary, a proper security strategy specifies who can access what and from where. For instance telecommuters will use VPN concentrators at the perimeter to access Windows and Unix servers. As well business partners could use an Extranet VPN connection for access to the company S/390 Mainframe. Define what security is required at all servers to protect company applications and files. Identify transaction protocols required to secure data as it travels across secure and non-secure network segments. Monitoring activities should then be defined that examine packets in real time as a defensive and pro-active strategy for protecting against internal and external attacks. A recent survey revealed that internal attacks from disgruntled employees and consultants are more prevalent than hacker attacks. Virus detection should then be addressed since allowed sessions could be carrying a virus at the application layer with an e-mail or a file transfer.

Security Policy Document

The security policy document describes various policies for all employees that use the enterprise network. It specifies what an employee is permitted to do and with what resources. The policy includes non-employees as well such as consultants, business partners, clients and terminated employees. In addition security policies are defined for Internet e-mail and virus detection. It defines what cyclical process if any is used for examining and improving security.

Perimeter Security

This describes a first line of defense that external users must deal with before authenticating to the network. It is security for traffic whose source and destination is an external network. Many components are used to secure the perimeter of a network. The assessment reviews all perimeter devices currently utilized. Typical perimeter devices are firewalls, external routers, TACACS servers, RADIUS servers, dial servers, VPN concentrators and modems.

Network Security 

This is defined as all of the server and legacy host security that is implemented for authenticating and authorizing internal and external employees. When a user has been authenticated through perimeter security, it is the security that must be dealt with before starting any applications. The network exists to carry traffic between workstations and network applications. Network applications are implemented on a shared server that could be running an operating system such as Windows, Unix or Mainframe MVS. It is the responsibility of the operating system to store data, respond to requests for data and maintain security for that data. Once a user is authenticated to a Windows domain with a specific user account, they have privileges that have been granted to that account. Such privileges would be to access specific directories at one or many servers, start applications, and administer some or all of the Windows servers. When the user authenticates to the Windows Active Directory Services distributed it is not any specific server. There is tremendous management and availability advantages to that since all accounts are managed from a centralized perspective and security database copies are maintained at various servers across the network. Unix and Mainframe hosts will usually require logon to a specific system, however the network rights could be distributed to many hosts.

·  Network operating system domain authentication and authorization

·  Windows Active Directory Services authentication and authorization

·  Unix and Mainframe host authentication and authorization

·  Application authorization per server

·  File and data authorization

Transaction Security 

Transaction security works from a dynamic perspective. It attempts to secure each session with five primary activities. They are non-repudiation, integrity, authentication, confidentiality and virus detection. Transaction security ensures that session data is secure before being transported across the enterprise or Internet. This is important when dealing with the Internet since data is vulnerable to those that would use the valuable information without permission. E-Commerce employs some industry standards such as SET and SSL, which describe a set of protocols that provide non-repudiation, integrity, authentication and confidentiality. As well virus detection provides transaction security by examining data files for signs of virus infection before they are transported to an internal user or before they are sent across the Internet. The following describes industry standard transaction security protocols.

Non-Repudiation – RSA Digital Signatures 

Integrity – MD5 Route Authentication

Authentication – Digital Certificates 

Confidentiality – IPSec/IKE/3DES

Virus Detection  – McAfee/Norton Antivirus Software

Monitoring Security

Monitoring network traffic for security attacks, vulnerabilities and unusual events is essential for any security strategy. This assessment identifies what strategies and applications are being employed. The following is a list that describes some typical monitoring solutions. Intrusion detection sensors are available for monitoring real time traffic as it arrives at your perimeter. IBM Internet Security Scanner is an excellent vulnerability assessment testing tool that should be considered for your organization. Syslog server messaging is a standard Unix program found at many companies that writes security events to a log file for examination. It is important to have audit trails to record network changes and assist with isolating security issues. Big companies that utilize a lot of analog dial lines for modems sometimes employ dial scanners to determine open lines that could be exploited by security hackers. Facilities security is typical badge access to equipment and servers that host mission critical data. Badge access systems record the date time that each specific employee entered the telecom room and left. Cameras sometimes record what specific activities were conducted as well.

Intrusion Prevention Sensors (IPS)

Cisco markets intrusion prevention sensors (IPS) to enterprise clients for improving the security posture of the company network. Cisco IPS 4200 series utilize sensors at strategic locations on the inside and outside network protecting switches, routers and servers from hackers. IPS sensors will examine network traffic real time or inline, comparing packets with pre-defined signatures. If the sensor detects suspicious behavior it will send an alarm, drop the packet and take some evasive action to counter the attack. The IPS sensor can be deployed inline IPS, IDS where traffic doesn’t flow through device or a hybrid device. Most sensors inside the data center network will be designated IPS mode with its dynamic security features thwarting attacks as soon as they occur. Note that IOS intrusion prevention software is available today with routers as an option.

Vulnerability Assessment Testing (VAST)

IBM Internet Security Scanner (ISS) is a vulnerability assessment scanner focused on enterprise customers for assessing network vulnerabilities from an external and internal perspective. The software runs on agents and scans various network devices and servers for known security holes and potential vulnerabilities. The process is comprised of network discovery, data collection, analysis and reports. Data is collected from routers, switches, servers, firewalls, workstations, operating systems and network services. Potential vulnerabilities are verified through non-destructive testing and recommendations made for correcting any security problems. There is a reporting facility available with the scanner that presents the information findings to company staff.

Syslog Server Messaging

Cisco IOS has a Unix program called Syslog that reports on a variety of device activities and error conditions. Most routers and switches generate Syslog messages, which are sent to a designated Unix workstation for review. If your Network Management Console (NMS) is using the Windows platform, there are utilities that allow viewing of log files and sending Syslog files between a Unix and Windows NMS.

Network Planning and Design Guide is available at Amazon.com and eBookmall.com

Shaun Hummel is an author of various technical books and has a web site focused on information technology job search solutions and certifications.

http://www.networkjobsolutions.com

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