News

 
 

10.14.2008

Symantec Enhances Interoperability through the Open Collaborative Architecture
Symantec Corp. announces the Open Collaborative Architecture and a new third-party developer program to establish greater interoperability and solution building using standard Web services, Web-based security, workflow management and configuration management technologies. The Web services-based architecture provides data sharing and IT automation to streamline process execution and reduce the cost and risk of IT ownership.

   
 

7.22.2008

SANSFIRE 08
Washington, DC - The attackers have changed the rules again — your defenses have to be re-tuned and updated.

   
 

5.22.2008

My Technology Lawyer.com Radio Show
Savant Team Featured - Audio Download

   
  3.25.2008 Savant Operational on Google ANDROID
Industry’s First Comprehensive Security Solution for Android OS.
   
  3.20.2008 IT Expert: Hackers Have Upper Hand
Savant’s President/CTO Ken Steinberg speaks with the Manchester Union Leader regarding the recent Hannaford data breach. Hannaford put the number of credit and debit card numbers that were potentially exposed to fraud at 4.2 million.
   
  1.25.2008

Attackers Abuse Google Blogger
Savant’s President/CTO Ken Steinberg uncovers hacker exploits disrupting Google Bloggers Network. Targeted attacks found delivering malware through various methods. Information shared with Dark Reading's, Kelly Jackson Higgins, and through her investigation brought immediate attention to these potentially harmful exploits.

   
  10.12.2006 A-Listing Your Apps — Enterprises Enlist App Whitelisting to Combat Malware and Unauthorized Tools
Whitelisting is getting a second look by some enterprises worried that unknown threats might get past antivirus and other blacklisting systems.Whitelisting, the process of spelling out exactly which applications can run on a client machine, traces its roots to the mainframe and was typically considered overkill in today's networks, as well as a potential management headache. But the rise in zero-day attacks and paranoia about users running whatever they want on their machines (think peer-to-peer apps), or introducing malware via USB sticks, has led some organizations to think retro.