The Egress service uses SaaS to make securely sending files a snap.

Adam Ely, COO, Bluebox

July 1, 2009

6 Min Read

Transferring sensitive data from user to user or company to company can be difficult when there's no secure data-transfer solution in place. Even more difficult is restricting who can open the files once they've left your control. Data protection packages can be very expensive and don't always provide the security required, which is why many small and midsize businesses haven't implemented a way to secure data and control who accesses it.

Egress Software Technologies' flagship product, Switch, provides a lightweight approach to these problems at price small and midsize businesses can afford. With Switch, you can create secure packages containing files that can be transferred to online or offline recipients.

No doubt this sounds like many other secure data-exchange products on the market, such as PGP, Pkware, and Bcrypt, but Switch has a twist. It controls access to the secure packages through Egress' servers, essentially making it a software-as-a-service offering.

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Installation is straightforward. First, you must create an account, which is done through the downloaded client. Using your account's e-mail address, the service grants access rights and associates packages. Next, you can choose to install the browser plug-in or the full Switch client. The browser plug-in lets users open secure packages, but they can't create them; the full client allows creation and opening of secure packages.

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Switch runs on Windows XP, Vista, and Server 2003, and customers' machines must have Microsoft .Net 2.0 Service Pack 1 installed. Although this Windows-only approach isn't unique to Egress' service, it does mean non-Windows businesses will have to seek an alternate route to secure exchanges.

In tests, after we downloaded the full client and entered our account information, we were up and running. The entire process took only a few minutes and was pretty easy. However, because there is no Mac or Linux client, we had to run Switch on a virtual machine running Windows.

How It Works
Once installed and logged in, we were prompted with the package-creation interface, which lets a user add files to a secure package and define who will have access to the secure package. This interface is similar to adding files to a Zip file.

Once files are defined, the user clicks the Create Package button and is asked what type of package to create. Users can select e-mail attachment, if a supported e-mail client is installed; a standalone encrypted file; CD/DVD with encrypted data; or a regular CD/DVD. The difference between an e-mail attachment and a standalone file is simply that Switch attaches the file to an e-mail for the user, which saves some time.

Once we selected the type of package to create, the necessary steps are performed, and we have our new access-controlled encrypted package. All packages use a unique Advanced Encryption Standard 256 key, and information about the package, and your account, is transmitted via Secure Sockets Layer between the Switch client and Switch servers.

At the other end of the trail, opening secure packages requires:

  • Installation of the Switch client or browser

  • The secure package file

  • A unique account per person

  • Internet access

Double click the package, enter your account information, and once authenticated, the files can be accessed inside the encrypted package. Once a secure package is opened, the access is logged on the Egress servers for review later.

This feature alone is valuable to an organization's compliance program because it tracks access to sensitive data no matter where or when it's accessed. Unfortunately, like other secure packaging and file encryption tools, once a package has been opened, there's no way to track where the files go or who accesses them.

What It Costs
A single-user version of Switch is free but doesn't let the user share packages with others and doesn't provide package access tracking. The free version might be a good choice for users who need to create secure packages for one-time usage or storage and have no other encryption system.

Our Take

EGRESS' SWITCH FOR
SECURE DATA EXCHANGE

Switch's unique software-as-a-service approach takes the pain out of secure exchanges by letting users control who can access files and tracking access. Monthly or per-package fee may be steep for some companies, but it's more cost-effective than some other options. Service must be secure from attackers, otherwise, your account and data could be at risk. Switch is only available for Windows, so enterprise Mac and Linux users are out of luck.

Organizations that need to transfer files, track who has opened them, and ensure that access is controlled can opt for a more robust multiuser edition of Switch. Users can pay per secure package they create, or pay a monthly fee. The pay-as-you-go option starts at $9.99 for five credits. A one-user monthly subscription is $49.99. This decreases to $7.49 per user for two to four users and $6.49 per user for five to 100 users per month.

Companies will have to weigh Switch's monthly fee scheme against the one-time payment for options such as PGP or even the widely deployed WinZip, which isn't marketed as a security product but can achieve similar results. Both PGP and WinZip also use AES-256 for encryption, although neither tracks or restricts who can access the package if the user has the password or encryption keys.

Switch's biggest benefits are its ability to track who has accessed the secure package and to restrict access to a defined list of users. It also can remove access without redistributing the secure package. Because Switch focuses on a different problem than traditional security tools such as PGP, it definitely has a place as an added level of security in the toolsets of many IT departments.

Adam Ely is senior manager of technology at a Fortune 100 company. Write to us at [email protected].

About the Author(s)

Adam Ely

COO, Bluebox

Adam Ely is the founder and COO of Bluebox. Prior to this role, Adam was the CISO of the Heroku business unit at Salesforce where he was responsible for application security, security operations, compliance, and external security relations. Prior to Salesforce, Adam led security and compliance at TiVo and held various security leadership roles within The Walt Disney Company where he was responsible for security operations and application security of Walt Disney web properties including ABC.com, ESPN.com, and Disney.com.

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