The security of virtualised environments took centre stage at
VMworld today as security
vendor McAfee and IT configuration firm
Tripwire made several key announcements.
McAfee launched a beta version its new email and web security virtual
appliance, which offers the same protection from spam, malware and malicious web
sites as McAfee's physical security appliances, the firm said.
It also announced an OEM agreement to use VMware's ESX Server 3i technology
in future security solutions. It will also embed VMware's VMsafe security
technology in future products.
McAfee used VMworld to launch a new service and new guidelines to help
organisations deploying virtualisation technologies to do so in a more secure
fashion.
The Foundstone Professional Services offering is designed to help
organisations by addressing the people, process and technology elements
surrounding virtual deployments, according to McAfee.
Christopher Bolin, McAfee's chief technology officer, said that the
disruptive effect virtualisation is having in the IT market represents a huge
opportunity for security vendors.
"The big news today is the announcement of VMsafe. With VMsafe McAfee will be
able to offer security for virtual environments beyond what is available for
physical environments," he explained. "With VMsafe a virtualised operating
system will be more secure than its physical equivalent."
Graham Titterington of analyst firm Ovum said that McAfee had stolen a march
on many of its rivals by positioning itself as a leader in virtual security.
"Virtualisation is a fundamentally secure technology but you need to think
about things like patching virtual machines," he explained. "And then it's not
just about protecting individual partitions; the hypervisor and the virtual
platform itself are potentially open to denial of service attacks."
Another vendor to blaze an early trail in the security market for
virtualisation is Proofpoint, which
offers a virtual appliance version of its email security product.
"More than any other IT segment, security vendors ship a lot of hardware,"
argued the firm's chief executive Gary Steele. "Other security vendors have
taken the same step as us and it makes lots of sense – an easy-to-set up and use
locked-down environment with no physical hardware."
Also at the show, Tripwire launched a new agentless solution designed to help
organisations adhere to operational, regulatory and security standards in their
VMware environments.
Tripwire Enterprise for VMware ESX Server features customisable configuration
assessment policies which allows firms to manage their configurations, and will
alert the administrator when any non-compliant changes are made, said the firm.
The product features certification from best practice standards drawn up by
the Center for Internet Security (CIS).
"The hypervisor is a blindspot for organisations because they don't have
the tools to manage it or have the right in-house experts to help," argued
Tripwire's Dwayne Melancon. "A lot of organisations are still reluctant to fully
deploy [virtualisation technologies] because of this."
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