InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 7
Posts 2727
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 07/22/2003

Re: None

Wednesday, 06/08/2005 7:57:10 AM

Wednesday, June 08, 2005 7:57:10 AM

Post# of 249244
Is this a reaction to



TCG and the coming Wave-type hardware-based solutions? It's a good sign then, no? It tells me the're trying to stave off a market shift. They're reacting.


RSA Middleware Allows Security Without Specialists
By John Pallatto
June 7, 2005
Be the first to comment on this article



RSA Security is introducing a middleware package that will make it easier for developers to implement encryption and other security features in their application designs.

Called the RSA BSafe Data Security Manager, this middleware allows application developers to implement security features without having specialized knowledge and experience in security programming, said Chris Parkerson, senior product manager with RSA Security Inc., based in Bedford, Mass. ADVERTISEMENT
Recent news reports about the theft of private account information for several hundred thousand customers from data brokers Choicepoint and LexisNexis highlights why enterprises need to build effective security into critical data-access applications, Parkerson said.

Enterprises are concerned about whether they have the resources in-house to improve application security.

Implementing features such as digital signing and encryption "has been very hard work, and very expensive work, requiring people who have a certain level of security knowledge and experience," Parkerson said.

The goal of the BSafe Data Security Manager is to make these features "available to every level of corporate developer" so developers can implement data encryption for every enterprise application that potentially exposes sensitive customer data, he said.

Click here to read why RSA Security believes that international standards for one-time password technologies could be the catalyst for the adoption of stronger authentication in enterprise applications.

The middleware allows security experts to make the decisions about what security policies and features are required by an application, while the programmer implements the policies.

Some organizations do a decent job of implementing security features in key database applications, Parkerson said. However, frequently they will leave security gaps in other applications that are deemed less critical, but are just as vulnerable, such as point-of-sale applications, he said.



The BSafe middleware gives corporate developers the ability to close these security gaps without hiring security programming specialists, who are expensive and hard to find given the demand for their skills these days in both government and the private sector, Parkerson said.

The middleware allows security experts to make the decisions about what security policies and features are required by an application, while the programmer implements the policies. Thus the security expert doesn't have to be an experienced application developer and the developer doesn't have to be an expert in security programming.

"We are trying to put security decisions in the hands of people who understand security" and programming decision in the hands of developers who understand programming procedures, he said.

The middleware allows companies to implement policy-based encryption and security mechanisms that don't require painstaking low-level programming to implement, Parkerson said. The middleware allows application developers to change security policies without having to make significant changes in the application code, he said.

To read why industry analysts fear that a national identity system could help ID thieves, click here.

The middleware will help companies address the uncertainty they have about whether they are implementing security properly in their critical business applications, according to Ray Wagner, research vice president with Gartner Research Inc. in Stamford, Conn.

"Organizations often have little confidence that they have implemented security controls property because of the high level of sophistication required, and the result is too often an expensive or even embarrassing scramble when a problem is found after rollout," Wagner said in a statement.

"The concept of a centralized, policy-based approach to providing security to and within applications," Wagner said, "may allow organizations to more easily control and audit application security, as well as change security polices over time without re-engineering applications."

The middleware package supports multiple programming languages, including Visual Basic, C++, C# and Java, Parkerson said.

The BSafe Data Security Manager will be ready for delivery in late September and will cost $50,000 for a developer license and $250,000 for an enterprise site license, according to company officials.

Check out eWEEK.com's Security Center for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer's Weblog.


Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.