Thales nShield Connect offers enterprise-class key management Setting up the nShield to work with a new application involves getting that application to work with one of the supported key management standards, PKCS#11, Microsoft CryptoAPI/CNG, Jave JCE or OpenSSL, or with one of the other supported security protocols. This can often be somewhat complex, as these are not necessarily the native methods for encryption. How we tested key management The Key Management Servers were tested with standard applications on both Windows and Linux environments, using Windows 2008 with the Microsoft Certificate Authority, IIS and SQL Server 2005, and Ubuntu 9.04 with Apache 2.2.12. We tested the products by setting each up to issue keys, revoke and renew keys, monitor for correct operation, create reports and logs of activity, setting policies for issuing keys and revoking them, and looking at the granularity of management capabilities. Encryption made easier with new key management tools In response to dramatic and widely-publicized losses of data over the last few years, IT execs are moving to deploy encryption in every corner of the enterprise. While encryption does reduce the chances of data loss, it can also create a management nightmare, with dozens of different encryption applications using hundreds or thousands of keys. Vormetric's agent-based approach provides strong key management across all apps The Vormetric Data Security Expert Security Server is not a direct competitor to the Thales and Venafi systems. Rather than managing keys used by other certificate authorities or encryption solutions, it manages its own encryption solution across multiple systems. Venafi key management software works smoothly with supported apps Venafi Encryption Director was the easiest of the three products to deploy. There was no fiddling with server applications to apply standards-based connectors, or to install add-on encryption modules. Microsoft Promises IIS Bug Patch Microsoft said it is working on a patch for a bug in its popular Web server software, but experts say it's unlikely that the company will field a fix fast enough to make this week's regular Patch Tuesday release. Microsoft Subnet is giving away training from New Horizons and 15 copies of Windows Server 2008 How-To. Cisco Subnet is giving away 15 copies of Interconnecting Data Centers Using VPLS. Google Subnet is hosting many new bloggers (watch for giveaway information soon.) Entry forms can be found on the Cisco Subnet and Microsoft Subnet home pages. Network World on Twitter? You bet we are |
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