Secure Mobility
The workplace has clearly changed. Employees are no longer tethered to their desks at company headquarters but are now to be found working wirelessly, or indeed working from branch offices, or remotely from home, at partner premises, at the airport - in fact, in any location where access to communications prevails. In addition, the development of Web 2.0 is raising the importance of collaboration between employees, customers and partners to enable business to be conducted anywhere, anytime.
Mobility presents significant challenges to business, as it’s not a simple case of providing remote access to applications. Enterprises must balance the requirement to enable remote workers and devices access to the network and applications with the need to protect corporate assets and control costs.
By enabling a secure mobility infrastructure, organisations can provide secure, flexible access to content for mobile and remote users from any device thus driving down costs, increasing productivity and fostering better business processes.
Which form of access do you need to secure?
-
Remote Access
An increasing amount of data is being stored on the network and work conducted online that has to be protected.
The nomadic business environment has given birth to a generation of mobile workers and road warriors who demand remote access to the network and its applications to be able to work more effectively and productively. However, the technologies and devices used to empower the workforce also open up the network to the risk of intrusion and therefore make it more vulnerable to being compromised.
Against a backdrop of tightening compliance regulations and accountability, an increasing amount of data is being stored on the network and work conducted online that has to be protected. The need for secure remote access capabilities for mobile users and devices to protect corporate assets while catering for the changing working locations of employees is essential. Which area of remote access would you like to find out more about – SSL VPN, Two Factor Authentication, End Point Security, RADIUS?
-
Network Access Control/802.1x
An increase in ‘outsiders’ accessing the network such as guests, partners and contractors using unmanaged devices creates a headache for IT Managers.
Mobility and new business models such as outsourcing and collaboration are forcing enterprises to open up the network to achieve greater business efficiencies. An increase in ‘outsiders’ accessing the network such as guests, partners and contractors using unmanaged devices creates a headache for IT Managers who must provide a flexible and open network, yet maintain tight security controls.
By deploying Network Access Control only authorised users may be admitted onto the network and using post admission controls by role or policy allocation can determine what the users can access and allowed to do once on the LAN to protect enterprise assets.
Once on the network, accurate information on user activities to ensure traffic is moving legitimately is needed. Devices that aren’t compliant with security policy and may contaminate or disrupt the network must be prevented from accessing.
-
Wireless LAN
Mobile devices are changing and are rapidly evolving - mobile phones, laptops, PDAs, VoWLAN phones and scanner guns... all with an expectation to roam seamlessly without performance loss over the WLAN.
After several years popularity in many vertical sectors, wireless networking has now become embedded in the enterprise as a recognised form of connectivity and flexible way of working. Using an array of devices such as laptops, PDAs and mobile phones, companies have benefited from the productivity gains and cost savings of employees being able to work anyway within the organisation and gain access to information in real time.
Wireless networking offers many advantages to companies but the provision and management of a wireless environment presents its own challenges. Wireless security is critical as a WLAN offers another gateway into the organisation meaning rogue access points and unencrypted traffic can put sensitive data at risk from intruders, unauthorised users or cyber terrorists.
Mobile devices are changing and are rapidly evolving - mobile phones, laptops, PDAs, VoWLAN phones and scanner guns... all with an expectation to roam seamlessly without performance loss over the WLAN. In addition, many mission critical applications are converting to wireless such as CRM, RFID and CCTV, and with new specific mobile applications, all require a resilient infrastructure over which to run.