Leading cybersecurity companies create Connected Security Alliance

With over 3,141 confirmed data breaches in 2015, the coalition looks to protect, detect and remediate data breaches by addressing the white space between security solutions.

  • 7 years ago Posted in
SecureAuth is leading the inception of the Connected Security Alliance, designed to take a holistic approach to solving the data breach problem. The Alliance, initially comprised of SecureAuth and cybersecurity solution providers CyberArk, SailPoint and Exabeam, creates a reference architecture that will help organisations address every stage of the attack lifecycle from initial penetration to lateral movement to escalating privileges.
 
Organisations are suffering from a lack of visibility across their environments with attackers exploiting the whitespace between security solutions. Due to lack of correlation of alerts from point products, attackers can go undetected for weeks to months. The Alliance is designed to better protect organisations and reduce the time it takes to detect these bad actors by providing more than just a collection of aligned vendors, but a connected framework, featuring:
 
·         Truly Integrated Framework: All solutions will pass rigorous interoperability testing. The result is a reference architecture and documentation that can help customers implement quickly and painlessly. 
·         Actionable Intelligence: By leveraging multiple datasets to determine risk or evidence of the attack, Alliance member solutions can increase the chance of detecting the early stages of a breach and thereby limit exposure to the enterprise.
·         Foundation of Identity: With the increase in breaches, the traditional perimeter security is failing due to the use of valid, yet compromised user credentials. Alliance members will leverage identity-context to detect and protect against bad actors.
·         Frictionless to the user: Adding adaptive authentication doesn’t mean adding a burden to your existing users. Adaptive, risk-based authentication works silently with minimal impact to the end user.
 
“In recent years, organisations of all sizes have been subject to a seemingly endless barrage of data breaches,” said Garrett Bekker, senior analyst at 451 Research.  “While there are countless security vendors approaching the data breach problem from various perspectives, most address only a piece of the overall attack lifecycle. By enabling out-of-the-box integrations between a select group of best-in-class security solutions, the formation of the Connected Security Alliance is a significant step towards providing a more holistic means of addressing the entire attack lifecycle.” 
 
 “We know our customers are managing multiple solutions and vendors. With increasingly sophisticated threats, we need to make it easier for security professionals protecting their environment – not more challenging,” said Mike Desai, senior VP of business and corporate development at SecureAuth. “Taking our customers’ needs into account, we developed the Connected Security Alliance to ensure organisations have the opportunity to select vendors they know can collaborate seamlessly.”
 
Research shows ‘game needs to be changed,’ with security innovation years behind that of the...
73% of organizations lack automated patch management, and 62% experienced incidents involving...
Quest Software has signed a definitive agreement with Clearlake Capital Group, L.P. (together with...
Dell EMC PowerProtect Cyber Recovery for AWS provides a fast, easy-to-deploy public cloud vault to...
Aqua’s cloud native application protection platform becomes the only solution that protects cloud...
54% of organisations working on a security transformation project now or in the next 12 months.
Node4 has released its Mid-Market IT Priorities Report 2021. The independent report reveals that...
Zscaler Zero Trust exchange cloud-based architecture enables superior green security capabilities...