Cutaway has a good post up today over at Security Ripcord. In it, he suggests that Microsoft should… well, I’ll let him say it:
Orchestria finally announced their first “true” general DLP product.
For those of you who don’t know, Orchestria has danced around this space for a few years now. They started with a product narrowly focused on helping certain financial services firms, particularly broker/dealers, manage compliance issues around insider trading and privacy. Basically you can think about it as a client-centric (with some networking monitoring) DLP solution focused on one category of violations. It didn’t work…
Fresh off today’s Daily Incite I saw that Raytheon acquired Oakley Networks.
Oakley is a bit of a strange bird- it’s not really DLP, but they have some interesting monitoring technology that’s well suited for certain environments- especially the federal sector that Raytheon plays in so strongly. Oakley started with an endpoint monitoring tool that’s like keystroke capture on steroids (and centrally manageable), and then bought a network tool vendor for monitoring acceptable use on the wire. It…
Yarr!
Today be Talk Like A Pirate Day, and we’ll not be having no landlubber speak on this here vessel.
So grab ye cutlass, man yer station, and PREPARE TO REPEL BOARDERS!!!
Boy, Chris is all riled up over my criticism of Jericho.
Let me put this bad boy to bed, at least from my side. Chris missed the point of my last post, and my editor tells me it might be because of how I wrote it. Thus I’ll be a little clearer in this one.
Sometimes it’s not even worth the effort.
First Rothman, then Hoff decide to bring up our favorite red headed stepchild (a term I use with fondness, since I have red hair and a stepfather); all based on an SC magazine article.
Martin’s recruited me to co-host indefinitely, and I think we’re finally working out the kinks. This one is all over the map but there were some interesting things to talk about:
Well, we finally know how Pfizer lost all those employee records. An employee installed P2P file sharing software on her laptop, and probably shared her entire drive. Oops. I bet I know one person that’s eating alone in the corporate lunchroom.
Welcome to part 3 of our series on Data Loss Prevention/Content Monitoring and Filtering. You should go read Part 1 and Part 2 before digging into this one.
Sigh.
Again.
More Jericho?
Yep. Can’t let Hoff go without a retort, not after this.
I’d like to quote my last post for a moment: