Sourcefire has an enviable position in the security world. Its open-source software is widely used for intrusion detection and prevention, and its hardware appliances brought in revenues of around ...
Is Snort, the 12-year-old open-source intrusion detection and prevention system, dead? The Open Information Security Foundation, a nonprofit group funded by the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) ...
Cisco Sourcefire recently announced that their Snort open source IDS/IPS 2.9.7 will now support free application visibility and control, called OpenAppID. It will be fully integrated into the current ...
Dr. Chris Hillman, Global AI Lead at Teradata, joins eSpeaks to explore why open data ecosystems are becoming essential for enterprise AI success. In this episode, he breaks down how openness — in ...
In 1998, Roesch, then 28 and an engineer at telecom company GTE-I, created an open-source program called Snort for detecting intrusions into computer networks. Today, he sheepishly acknowledges that ...
Researchers from Demarc, a Carpinteria, Calif.-based security vendor, discovered the vulnerability May 17 and released a patch May 31. Researchers found that while connecting to Web ports via telnet, ...
Popular open source intrusion detection and prevention system Snort has received a major upgrade, featuring several new features including the ability to run across multiple environments and operating ...
Yesterday, the Committee on Foreign Investments in the United States announced it was investigating the acquisition of a small American company - Sourcefire - by the Israeli company CheckPoint. The ...
In a statement, Roesch said ClamAV will broaden Sourcefire's open source footprint and enable the company to develop new products and services as part of its Enterprise Threat Management network ...
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