Tom Reilly, ArcSight president and chief executive officer, and Stewart Grierson, ArcSight chief financial officer, will present at two upcoming investor conferences in September.more >>
Company Posts Total Revenues of $48.1M for Fiscal First Quarter and GAAP and Non-GAAP Earnings per Diluted Share of $0.08 and $0.18, Respectively.more >>
The ArcSight Enterprise Threat and Risk Management (ETRM) platform is used by the most demanding organizations and government agencies in the world to monitor business activities.more >>
The ArcSight Architecture Review service helps customers define a flexible and scalable solution architecture capable of meeting current and future business requirements.more >>
Cybercrime is a sophisticated industry, Marsal said. Just as an auto manufacturer turns to vendors for products such as steel and electronic components, crooks turn to specialized providers for botnets. A criminal can go to a botnet supplier and ask for help getting inside a specific company, such as British Petroleum. Experts say anywhere from 4% to 7% of the computers in large enterprises are infected with malware.more >>
Every day SC Magazine talks about malware variants and what sort of technology is best placed to protect against them. However, Zeus has now reportedly been a threat for more than three years and seems to be making more of an impact than ever.more >>
The ArcSight EnterpriseView for Cisco application provides broad cross-device event correlation for Cisco infrastructure, as well as detailed views into events and alerts from specific Cisco devices. Powerful analysis tools allow customers to monitor activity, configuration changes, availability and threats across Cisco devices in their environment.more >>
August 31, 2010, 10am PT | 12pm CT | 1pm ET
60 minutes
Despite the billions of dollars that enterprises have invested in identity and access management technologies, access control problems are getting worse, not better. As more companies turn to contractors and Cloud services, IT security departments face even greater difficulty deploying identity management technologies and role managers to control, revoke and apportion access rights. And yet the burning question still remains, can you ever perfectly monitor everyone in an imperfect world?more >>
The question is whether vendors or agencies are responsible for cybersecurity. The answer? Both. Preston Winter, former Chief Information Officer and Chief Technology Officer at the National Security Agency and currently CTO of the public sector at ArcSight, said in an interview with GovInfoSecurity that some companies are just beginning to make the effort to write more secure code.more >>
ArcSight CTO/public sector at ArcSight doesn’t blame vendors entirely for the situation. “In large measure, even the buyers whose systems are at risk don’t necessarily put security at the top of the priority list,” he says. “As we go around and talk to CISOs and CTOs and CIOs, in some ways the biggest problem they have is explaining to their CEOs and CFOs why it is necessary to spend money on protection. People just don’t understand the threat.”more >>