Cisco's Secure Access Service Edge products may now be purchased as a subscription service, allowing for its solutions to be provided in an integrated package accessible through a cloud dashboard, Network World reports. Cisco's Security Business Group Senior Vice President and General Manager Gee Rittenhouse said the package encompasses the company's Viptella and Meraki SD-WAN software products, remote access components Duo and AnyConnect and its Umbrella network security solution. Experts say enterprises continuously seek integrated security packages in the market, as "[e]ighty percent of organizations want to reduce the number of security vendors and products to create a more integrated protection/incident-response," according to Gartner Research Vice President Peter Firstbrook. In addition, Cisco upgraded several of the package's components, such as Umbrella security's new remote browser isolation, data loss prevention and cloud malware detection capabilities; passwordless authentication on Duo; and a new single interface for threat detection and remediation for its SecureX cloud-based platform. The company also unveiled the new SASE Developer Center channel in its DevNet community with resources for developing SASE implementations that incorporate SASE's various components.
Jill Aitoro leads editorial for SC Media, and content strategy for parent company CyberRisk Alliance. She 20 years of experience editing and reporting on technology, business and policy.
Washington, D.C.'s Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking has disclosed that 800GB of data claimed to have been stolen by the LockBit ransomware operation was obtained from an attack against third-party software provider Tyler Technologies following the ransomware gang's threats to expose 1GB of the exfiltrated data to coerce the agency into providing the demanded ransom, reports The Record, a news site by cybersecurity firm Recorded Future.
Organizations could have their sensitive information compromised through a high-severity vulnerability in Google Cloud, Azure, and Amazon Web Services command line interface tools dubbed "LeakyCLI", The Hacker News reports.