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E-Mail
Security Products Meld in Response to Blended Threats
As spam becomes viral and viruses spread through spam, anti-virus
and anti-spam companies are aggregating products and solutions to serve up multi
part security and messaging solutions.
It's a trend. Anti-virus companies are buying up anti-spam companies. Our Anti-Spam
directory notes that anti-virus vendor Sophos acquired ActiveState and Symantec
purchased Brightmail and TurnTide. ISS, a security services firm, acquired anti-spam
and filtering operation Cobion.
But even bigger fish are swimming here. Earlier this year, Juniper Networks
purchased firewall vendor NetScreen for $4 billion. Cisco has been making smaller
purchases, such as Twingo, acquired for $5 million, and Allegro, a VPN company,
that it acquired for $181 million.
Recently, Cisco signed an agreement to acquire P-Cube for about $200 million.
P-Cube makes a firewall-like device that provides total security for enterprises
and ISPs. Len LuPriore, senior director of corporate marketing at P-Cube, notes,
"there's been a lot of consolidation in the anti-spam space. We're approaching
the problem differently and in a complementary fashion to other systems."
The idea is to augment measures already in place, not to replace them. "We
assist the service provider in figuring out the problem and how to protect against
it. We reduce the overall network costs caused by junk mail, and also the storage
problems and costs caused by junk mail."
Dawn of the dead subscribers
Threats are changingfor the worseevery day. Last week, for example,
eSecurityPlanet.com noted (in Spammers
Hide Trojan in Opt-Out Link) that viruses can be placed anywhere in
an e-mail. Service providers cannot assume that end users will understand the
issue.
"Subscribers are going to ISPs and asking for help. They don't understand
the problem, how it's sourced, or why it's hitting them directly," says LuPriore.
Right now, P-Cube is focused on solving the zombie problem. The P-Cube system
intercepts traffic from a compromised customer and redirects that customer's
browser to the ISP's help desk. "This lowers supports costs, and the subscriber
sees some value in to too. The subscriber feels good about the service provider
if the service provider helps fix the problem," says LuPriore.
A secure base
But not every anti-spam outfit is being purchased. Many remain independent.
One such is IronPort, the company that announced it was changing messaging forever
when it came out of stealth mode in 2001. "Our mission at IronPort is to revolutionize
Internet messaging," the company's CEO, Scott Weiss, told
internetnews.com in November of that year.
IronPort settled on a very different system than that of P-Cube or Cisco.
Rather than relying on lone appliances, the company built a network in which
every customer would assist every other customer in the detection of problems
and in creating a whitelist through a bonded sender program.
The latest iteration in this ongoing project is called SenderBase.
"This network gives us an insight into 25 percent of the world's e-mail traffic,"
enthuses Ambika Gare, director of product management information services at
IronPort.
The SenderBase network, she explains, collects data from contributing organizations,
including message volume, message composition, data from spam traps on those
networks, complaints, ISP abuse reports, Spamcop (which the company now owns),
and "about eight different blacklists."
It's all about reacting quickly, in real time. "The real power of this network
is that the data is dynamic and collected in real time," she says. "If a partner
gets compromised, their reputation will fall."
The system rates the likelihood that a message is spam based on the reputation
of the network it originated from and based on its content and statistics. A
receiving system that uses SenderBase might automatically reject all messages
rated -4 to -10, automatically accept all messages rated 4 to 10, and scan all
messages rated -4 to 4.
If a whitelisted major ISP starts to have a zombie problem, its reputation
will drop, and messages from that ISP will be scanned. If the problem continues,
those messages will be rejected. When the problem is solved, the ISP will be
whitelisted again.
The IronPoint approach is very different from the P-Cube/Cisco approach and
we think that's good. It's good for the ISP industry when there are a variety
of ideas on how to protect the network and the messaging infrastructure.
This is our prediction for the coming months and even for the next few years:
expect more consolidation as companies merge and acquire pieces of the puzzle
in order to serve up a total messaging security solution.
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