March 2009
 
   
 
Cyberoam Introduces
On Appliance SSL VPN
 
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On Appliance SSL VPN
   
Cyberoam has announced the introduction of SSL VPN, on its UTM appliances in step with emerging business demands and continuous efforts to deliver utmost security, while eliminating costs due to multiple standalone security solutions. Cyberoam on-appliance SSL VPN eliminates the limitations of IPSec VPNs which require expensive, time consuming client installations, and lack the flexibility required to deliver secure, remote access to employees, customers and partners in today’s business world. VPNC- certified Cyberoam SSL VPN with its network extension client is an effective replacement for IPSec for secure remote access. The certification is also a confirmation of the fact that Cyberoam works with a wide variety of web portals, browsers and dynamic websites, meeting the challenges of real-world usability and compatibility faced by other SSL VPNs.
 
 
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Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. (BSNL) is the World's 7th largest Telecommunications Company and India’s largest public sector unit providing a comprehensive range of telecom services in India that covers wireline, CDMA, GSM, Internet, Broadband, carrier service, MPLS-VPN, VSAT, and VoIP etc. BSNL has two ISP connections BSNL and AIRTEL with Linux based proxy servers which were unable to do any sort of web content filtering. Also the load balancing and failover for both the ISP links, was also a tedious manual process. Therefore there main areas of concern were loss of productivity, bandwidth wastage and uncontrolled surfing that led to malwares playing havoc with network. All of these, as a result, led to high frequency of help desk calls for the IT department.
 
BSNL chose Cyberoam and installed one 500i in the corporate office and one 250i in a strategic branch office nearby both in Gateway mode. In the corporate office, both the ISP links were terminated on Cyberoam to facilitate link load balancing and gateway failover. Thus BSNL deployed Cyberoam-Identity based UTM which provided multiple security features, superior functionality and extreme simplicity in protecting and optimizing their networks.
 
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February’s Top Twenty Malware list features a number of important changes as compared to previous month. The network worm, Kido which was introduced in January has gained strong momentum in February. Other newcomers included were, a variant of compression utility for Magania Trojans, (a very common family which steals passwords to online games), a certain type of obfuscation for AutoIT scripts, and an entire class of programs encrypted using the new malicious packer TDSS.
   
All malicious, advertising and potentially unwanted programs in the Top Twenty are being grouped according to the main classes of threats under MalWare, TroWare and VirWare, and there seemed no shift in the balance between these classes since January. At the same time, the number of self-replicating programs remained uniformly high with a total of 45 396 unique malicious, advertising, and potentially unwanted programs on users' computers.
 
The second Top Twenty presents data on which malicious programs most commonly infected objects detected on users’ computers. Malicious programs capable of infecting files make up the majority of this ranking. Also, the second on the list was an important newcomer – Virus.Win32.Virut.ce a variant of the polymorphic virus Virut.
 
  Read the Threat Report