The service basically provides companies with information and analysis about their machines, identities, and other resources that are infected by malware used for cybercrime.
"We felt that enterprise security managers don't have much sense of the direct impact malware is posting to their organizations and whether their security policies and procedures are strong enough," says Sean Brady, senior manager for identity protection and verification at RSA.
The new service provides organizations with intelligence about these infections and evidence of stolen data or information. "We provide actionable intelligence for them," Brady says. When a company's IP address or domain are discovered in Trojan drop zones, for instance, the service -- which uses RSA's existing AntiFraud Command Center -- will alert the victim company.
"If information recorded by the Trojan by IP address or domain points to our customers...we can tell them [the Trojan] is 'hitting this machine sitting on your network,'" he says.
RSA's Anti-Fraud Command Center found that among the Fortune 500, 88 percent had systems that were accessed by infected machines, and 60 percent had email account information stolen. RSA's Brady says the data shows how exposed the Fortune 500 is to malware overall.
The CyberCrime Intelligence Service costs about $7,500 per month, and will be available on May 1. "What's unique about what RSA is offering is that we have the ability both to identify the machines affected by these infections, and can then provide that information back to our customers about the impact of this on their organizations," Brady says.
Have a comment on this story? Please click "Discuss" below. If you'd like to contact Dark Reading's editors directly, send us a message.
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
Using Service Providers To Manage DDoS Threats
When it comes to the battle against distributed denial-of-service attacks, you are not alone. With the increasing use of third-party service providers, your organization likely has a huge arsenal of bandwidth, technology and know-how at its disposal. The challenge is to effectively marshal those resources among your providers and integrate them with your own security measures into a strategic and comprehensive DDoS protection plan.
Hosted Web Security Services: Block Malware Before Your Border
Security service providers are now delivering a wide range of packaged offerings, including Web content filtering, anti-malware, data leak prevention, and many other capabilities. How can your organization take advantage of these Web security services, and how can you choose the right provider? This Dark Reading Tech Center report offers a look at these services and some recommendations on how best to implement them.
You've Got (Secure) Mail: Using Service Providers to Boost Protection
The SaaS market is still in its infancy, but hosted e-mail security firms are leading the way, thanks to ease of implementation and many obvious benefits. Still, these services are not without risks. In this Dark Reading Tech Center report, we'll discuss how to determine what mix of in-house and hosted email security makes sense for your organization.
Other reports from the Security Services Tech Center:
| Sponsored by: |
Establishing a Formal Cyber Intelligence Capability
Organizations are realizing that advanced intelligence capabilities consistently deliver substantial cost savings - with proactive insights on true threats, the intelligence to avoid false alarms, and the system and application availability required to preserve revenues and customer loyalty. But achieving these benefits requires organizations to establish a formal cyber intelligence capability. Read this whitepaper to learn about a proven, repeatable process with clearly established steps for setting up an in-house cyber security intelligence operation.
DDoS Mitigation: Best Practices for a Rapidly Changing Threat Landscape
Although DDoS attacks have become a mainstay of hackers' arsenals, their profile has changed considerably in the past year, making them an even greater threat to companies that conduct business online. DDoS attacks are larger, stealthier, more targeted, and more sophisticated than ever. Get best practices to enable your organization to keep pace with DDoS attacks while minimizing impact on business operations.
2012 Cyber Crime Threats and Trends
Get the highlights of 2011 cyber security trends and how those trends and others might unfold in 2012. This report is a strategic complement to daily tactical intelligence reports and provides IT security and business operations with actionable and relevant decision support.
Using Hybrid Routing to Optimize DNS Resolution Performance and Reliability
To create a satisfactory end user experience, enterprises must ensure that DNS resolution is fast and reliable. Learn more about how using a hybrid routing solution can greatly maximize performance while minimizing latency-and address your business' specific needs along the way.
A Cost Analysis of Approaches To DDoS Protection.
All organizations with an online presence or dependence on Internet-based systems need to fortify their defenses against DDoS attacks. DDoS can cost an organization in tangible losses and in more subtle ways. Read this whitepaper for a deeper perspective on the cost benefits of a dedicated, cloud-based DDoS service over an in-house hardware solution or over-provisioning through your ISP.
MORE NEWSFEED >>>