With so many network threats, a variety of possible options for solving them and only so much time or budget available to you to make your network safe, you’re stretched to make the best choice for your company.
Many network security solutions are difficult to manage, requiring huge investments of hands-on IT time to manage and operate. Firewalls alone can miss ever-evolving threats from e-mail, or users that transport their laptops or USB keys beyond your secure perimeter and back again, making securing your internal network a monumentally challenging task!
What’s an IT Manager to do?
Intrusion Protection from Alert Logic’s Threat Manager automatically guards your internal network against attacks. You’ll achieve superior network protection through a single product. Using an on-premises appliance, a hosted expert system, a hosted virtual appliance and an on-demand user console, you’ll have the power of multiple monitoring points at your fingertips.
With Seven-Factor Scenario Modeling Detection Technology, Threat Manager identifies only valid security incidents that threaten your interior network, then blocks or contains it by reconfiguring firewalls, switches and ports to block or remove compromised hosts from the network.
False alarms—common with other products—are minimised through the Seven-factor analysis, which correlates attacker history, the nature of the exploit, target vulnerabilities, target value and global threat trends.
And, when technology alone can’t automatically identify threats, Alert Logic’s Global threat Centre Security Operations Centre (SOC) provides optional extra assurance through ActiveWatch Monitoring. Staffed around the clock by certified expert security professionals—so you can sleep—the SOC monitors your network and helps you take effective, immediate action when a legitimate security incident occurs.
The best part?
Because maintenance and updates of the on-premise and virtual appliances are the responsibility of Alert Logic, you and your IT staff don’t have to spend time making sure it’s running with all the current protocols, freeing that time for work on other things. |