Startup Flips On Its Virtual Switch

A growing number of security startups aim to bring visibility to the network traffic of virtual systems. Today, Montego Networks officially came out of stealth mode.

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A growing number of security startups aim to bring visibility to the network traffic of virtual systems. Today, Montego Networks officially came out of stealth mode.There are definitely a number of security challenges associated with virtualization, including the predisposition of virtual machines to spawn like summertime dandelions. Not to mention the potential loss of visibility of network traffic traveling from VM to VM.

Montego says its new HyperSwitch integrates network policy enforcement and access control into this virtual switch.

The vendor boasts a number of capabilities in its release, from policy-based virtual network partitioning (this can be a big deal in regulated environments) to policy-based switching and load balancing.

Next month the vendor says it'll start offering a new Starter Edition of the HyperSwitch and will price its Enterprise Edition at $495. It supports VMware environments now, but will also support Citrix, Virtual Iron, and Microsoft (when it ships).

What's interesting about this announcement (other than that we seem to be virtualizing everything nowadays, from servers to storage to data) is that Montego's HyperSwitch can switch traffic, again based on policy, to other third-party virtual security vendors. Montego mentioned Blue Lane, Catbird, and StillSecure in its release.

If this app lives up to Montego's claims, it's another step toward solving one of virtualization's biggest security bugaboos: lack of VM-to-VM visibility.

If anyone has had a chance to kick around the beta version of this switch, I'd be interested in hearing about your experience.

About the Author

George V. Hulme, Contributing Writer

An award winning writer and journalist, for more than 20 years George Hulme has written about business, technology, and IT security topics. He currently freelances for a wide range of publications, and is security blogger at InformationWeek.com.

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