New versions of three products address data availability, accountability and integrity without having to write additional code.
Launch of BEA WebLogic Enterprise Security (WLES) first new product resulting from February acquisition of CrossLogix.
Analysis of the recent wave of virus attacks.
Ponder the security challenges posed by Web services, how to address them with security architecture, and what security architecture can offer going forward when XML traverses firewalls.
For many reasons, enterprise application security is an inefficient and expensive model. Obviously there''s no such thing as a completely secure application, but enterprises must target an acceptable level of risk.
New standards rolled out at the Catalyst conference.
Company says content management, not content blocking, is the future.
A cornerstone of Web services, the WSDL spec continues to evolve; experts hope upcoming versions can bring it to a new level; a look at today’s WSDL tools.
Venerable security takes on high-tech crime.
Crafting a map of your database servers can help you build better systems, from increased security to solid disaster-recovery plans. Take these steps to get your server network in order.
Database maker adds security function to its BI software.
Company offers new way to use its security product, and unveils a defense against attacks from inside and out.
We recently asked security maven Steve Orrin to tell us some of the tenets of secure coding today.
Maker of compression utility adds features to flagship product.
At this week's VSLive in San Francisco, security specialist Sanctum Inc. announced an automated security testing suite for application developers -- AppScan Developer Edition (DE) 1.5 -- that can integrate with Microsoft's Visual Studio .NET.
The application and operating system levels are the places to focus on when detecting and blocking hacker attacks, said the founder of Sana Security Inc., a new technology company pledged to provide better computer security.
Microsoft's in-house development groups last year took a well-publicized sabbatical to try to better ensure the security of the company's software. Best practices developed during and since that "trip to the woodshed" have now led to
guides and suggestions the company offers to all developers working on its Windows -- now .NET -- platform.
According to Gary McGraw, CTO at Cigital, the greatest threat to computer system security is "the software you wrote yourself without thinking about security when you were writing it." He offers some tips on avoiding hackers and script kiddies.
It is time to move beyond the pre-Web services model for security systems, contends Kerry Champion, president of Westbridge Technology Inc., a Mountain View, Calif.-based start-up builder of XML firewalls.