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The VeriSign Security Review
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Q1 2005
Industry
Intelligence for IT Executives
February 2005, VOL.2, NO. 4 (formerly the Intelligence and Control Review)
Brought to you by VeriSign Security Services
2004 was a year in which hackers did not rest. They hit organizations
with a series of particularly sophisticated “hybrid” attacks that combined
denial-of-service (DoS) strategies, exploits of system vulnerabilities,
and complex “social-engineering” techniques such as “phishing,” in which
perpetrators use fake email in an attempt to glean passwords. Fortunately,
these attacks were easily thwarted by companies with the ability to
see them coming. Through this newsletter, we provide you with the needed
intelligence to take proactive control over your security and your network,
so that you can reach your highest goals for the coming year.
In this Issue:
Stronger Security, Supported
by Multiple Credentials
By Nico Popp
Vice President, Authentication Services
Passwords provide
a measure of security, but unfortunately, they are often insufficient
for securing critical systems; they can be guessed or stolen with relative
ease, and a hacker needs only one working ID in order to steal valuable
information or vandalize the critical systems of entire organizations.
For this reason, companies are beginning to deploy Strong Authentication
security systems, which combine something that they know, like a user
name, with something that they have, like a one-time-password token
or a USB smartcard. Although two-factor authentication gives users truly
secure access to critical systems and applications, historical solutions
are too costly, inflexible, and complex for most corporations to deploy.
Corporations deploying
Strong Authentication solutions therefore need an intelligent infrastructure
that is flexible enough to adapt to the broad range of users and applications
found in today’s modern enterprise. This solution must be highly scaleable
to support a corporation’s natural growth. At the same time, it must
remain uncompromisingly cost effective, and easy to deploy and manage.
VeriSign offers just such a service, VeriSign® Unified Authentication,
which enables enterprises to leverage a single integrated platform for
all of their Strong Authentication needs. Based on ubiquitous open standards
such as Radius and LDAP, VeriSign Unified Authentication eliminates
the need to develop and maintain proprietary systems for strong authentication.
Unified Authentication
provides more value than many other Strong Authentication solutions,
since it includes a next-generation multi-purpose token that can be
used both as a one-time-password token (in unplugged mode) and as a
USB smartcard (in plugged mode). Unified Authentication reduces the
total cost of ownership by leveraging an enterprise’s existing infrastructure,
and it moves the complexity of security and scalability to VeriSign’s
substantial Internet infrastructure. Because the solution leverages
open standards, it’s designed to fit easily within most organizations’
architectures, and because it is interoperable with most devices, no
matter the protocol, the solution can be considered “future proof” with
regard to technological innovation.
The latest release,
Unified Authentication 2.5, extends platform and application support
and delivers additional deployment options for larger enterprises. Key
enhancements include:
- Non-Windows LDAP and RDBMS user store support
- A highly scalable authentication engine that provides in-premise validation
of one-time-password values within the enterprise
- Extended Microsoft application support that will include one-time-password
authentication for Windows logon and Outlook for Web Access
- Additional client software components that will support one-time-password
authentication for Linux as well as Unix logon, mainframe logon, and
Citrix logon.
- An included software development kit (SDK)
In addition, VeriSign
recently announced
that Unified Authentication will now come bundled with IBM® Tivoli Identity
Manager software, which will make it even easier for IT administrators
to manage the distribution and control of tokens and other devices.
This software also provides an automated mechanism for selectively granting
access to business applications and data.
For more information,
please visit the Unified
Authentication pages on the VeriSign Web site.
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Intrusion Prevention: Thinking
Beyond The Box
By Scott Magrath
Product manager, VeriSign Managed Security Services
For anyone concerned
about network security, notification in the event of any security breach
is critical, and has become a mandatory component of any security program.
Recently, however, security professionals are realizing that they need
to be able to stop a potential intrusion before it becomes a threat.
For this reason, hardware-based intrusion prevention system (IPS) devices
have begun to gain traction in the marketplace. IPS devices combine
the ability of an IDS device to detect an attack, with the ability of
a firewall to block malicious traffic. Market research firm In-Stat/MDR predicted
that the combined market for IPS and IDS technologies would reach $1.4
billion by 2008, an increase of $541 million since 2003. While these
technologies are incredibly powerful, they are not, as some would have
you believe, a “silver bullet.” Even the implementation of IPS devices
is not enough to safeguard a corporate network, and security professionals
agree that a truly effective security strategy requires more than the
purchase and deployment of security devices, no matter how robust and
full-featured they may be.
Even the best technologies,
if not part of a complete security program, can be virtually useless.
Beyond limiting their usefulness, IPS technologies if improperly deployed
or configured, can actually create new problems for an enterprise. For
example, an IPS device deployed inline with the wrong blocking policy
can actually prevent benign traffic from entering the network; resulting
in negative impacts to the business. Each organization needs the expertise
to configure these technologies according to the particularities of
their business. Intrusion prevention policies must be carefully reviewed
and regularly updated to ensure that they are aligned with the particular
needs of the organization’s IT environment. In addition, devices must
be monitored continuously for uptime and security events. Such monitoring
requires more than a person watching a monitor for an alert; it requires
an intelligent infrastructure, active 24/7, that can analyze all traffic
and correlate network events, as well as evaluate the functioning of
these in-line devices on a regular basis. However, most companies
do not have access to such an infrastructure.
VeriSign offers
a Managed Intrusion Prevention Service (MIPS) that allows corporations
to leverage VeriSign’s substantial infrastructure capabilities and considerable
security expertise. With MIPS, companies can ensure that their IPS devices
are not only operating efficiently, but are operating under a fully
effective, pro-active security strategy that blocks unwanted traffic
while intelligently allowing benign traffic to flow freely. VeriSign
works with each individual MIPS customer to develop and fine-tune intrusion-prevention
policies to ensure they are operating at peak efficiency. As with all
its fully-managed offerings, VeriSign also patches and upgrades all
devices under management.
VeriSign’s Intelligent
Infrastructure Services are housed in military-grade Security Operations
Centers (SOCs), highly available environments that provide 24/7 monitoring
and management of security infrastructures for Global 2000 companies.
All data is backed up across multiple redundant systems, eliminating
any single point of failure. Through TeraGuard™, VeriSign’s information
management architecture, VeriSign analyzes and prioritizes all security
events, across multiple devices, multiple customers, and across the
internet through VeriSign’s unique position in the internet infrastructure
using its multi-context correlation engine. This enables VeriSign to
quickly eliminate false positives, focus on the real threats, and take
the appropriate action.
For more information
about VeriSign MIPS, please call 650.426.5310 or send an email to mss_ips@verisign.com.
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The OATH Initiative Gains Momentum
By David Berman
OATH Marketing Group Representative
In the late sixties,
researchers at the U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), developers of the open, distributed networking architecture
that evolved into the modern-day Internet, probably could not have predicted
the extent to which the original network would grow. Billions of interconnected
nodes form the Internet of today, and these include not only desktop
computers connected via wirebound networks but also laptops, cell-phones,
pagers, PDAs, and a range of other devices connected over WiFi, cellular,
and myriad other kinds of networks.
This proliferation
of users and devices has greatly expanded the Internet’s usefulness
and ubiquity while also adding considerable complexity to the tasks
of maintaining security and authenticating users. With so many protocols
to address, security professionals are hard pressed to decide which
standards are best to support. If such professionals could leverage
open, ubiquitous standards, they could respond to today’s security threats
much more quickly, more efficiently, and much more cost-effectively.
For this reason, at the 2004 RSA Conference, a group of companies announced
that they would join forces to form the Initiative for Open AuTHentication
(OATH). OATH’s mission is to drive the availability of strong authentication
across all networks and devices through the establishment of an open-standards-based,
interoperable “blueprint.”
The OATH group was
originally formed by security vendors, device manufacturers, and middleware
and application developers, but the group is actively seeking participation
from corporations, merchants, and financial institutions as well; organizations
know their own security needs better than any other party, and open
security standards will be more effective with strong participation
from all of the major participants. The first OATH meeting took place
in April of last year, and soon after, three working groups were established
(the Joint Coordination Committee, Technology Focus Group, and Marketing
Focus Group), and OATH’s members agreed on governance guidelines and
goals.
Revitalizing the One-Time-Password
The OATH group is active in the promotion of new open-source tools and
the enhancement of existing ones. At Digital ID World in October, the
OATH group announced that it had released a new algorithm to the Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF), an algorithm for facilitating the generation
of one-time passwords (OTPs). Since OTPs cannot be re-used, they are
practically useless to thieves. Once approved, the HMAC (Hashed Message
Authentication Code) algorithm would allow any vendor or security provider
to more easily build systems that incorporate OTPs. Further technical
details regarding HMAC are available at the IETF [Link to http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-mraihi-oath-hmac-otp-01.txt]
site.
OATH Expands
Since its founding, manufacturers and application developers continue
to swell OATH’s ranks. Such organizations are increasing the wealth
of resources available to developers who seek to build systems that
strengthen security and improve the bottom line by integrating multiple
technologies. At Digital ID World (Denver, Co., October 26), more than
30 companies announced that they had agreed to form a charter to drive
the adoption of open, standards-based strong authentication technology.
Currently, OATH
includes the following companies: ActivCard, Inc.; Aladdin Knowledge
Systems; ARM; Assa Abloy ITG; Authenex, Inc.; Aventail; Axalto Inc.;
BEA Systems; BMC Software, Inc.; Checkpoint Software Technologies; Citrix
Systems, Inc.; DataKey, Inc.; Digital Persona; Diversinet Corp.; Entrust
Technologies, Inc.; Forum Systems, Inc.; Gemplus Corp.; I.B.M.; IMCentric,
Inc.; Iteon; Juniper Networks, Inc.; K.K. Athena SmartCard Solutions;
Livo Technologies S; Passlogix, Inc.; Phoenix Technologies Ltd.; SafeNet,
Inc.; SecuriCode Limited; Signify; Smart Card Alliance; VASCO Data Security;
VeriSign, Inc.; and VOCENT.
If you would like
to join OATH, and help shape the development of tomorrow’s security
standards, fill out a short form
accessible via the OATH
Web site. If you have any questions about OATH or its mission, please
send an email to info@openauthentication.org.
For more information
on OATH, visit http://www.openauthentication.org
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Profile: i-SAFE America
Developing a system
to allow students to chat safely online
The Internet can
be a useful, educational medium for students, but it can also be dangerous
because people take advantage of the anonymity of the online world.
Some students have been lured from chat rooms into face-to-face meetings
with adults who had been masquerading as other students. Clearly, youth
need to be taught early on about the pitfalls of online communication,
and that is precisely the mission of i-SAFE America (www.isafe.org).
Teri Schroeder, i-SAFE president and CEO, said that she founded i-SAFE
in response to a letter from one student relaying some difficulties
she experienced online. “i-SAFE was formed to empower this student and
every student across the nation,” says Schroeder. Having been awarded
its first year of congressional appropriations in 2001, the foundation
has been extremely successful in its educational pursuits, and as of
last year, 1,185 schools have implemented i-SAFE’s curricula throughout
50 U.S. states. In pursuit of Schroeder’s mission, the organization
has educated over 600,000 students in the year 2004 alone.
Schroeder wanted
to build on i-SAFE’s educational foundation, and implement a technology
solution that would further protect students participating in the organization’s
programs. Schroeder needed a way for students to reliably authenticate
themselves when engaged in online activities. She needed a tool that
was compliant with open standards and widely accepted within well known
market segments. Finally, she needed a system that would work seamlessly
across numerous platforms. To meet these needs, Schroeder turned to
VeriSign for its Unified Authentication offering.
A Trusted Environment
Through VeriSign, i-SAFE will be able to authenticate the identity of
each student through the distribution of digital certificates, which
act as “keys” to unlock access to email, chat rooms, and one-to-many
communication tools. VeriSign’s proposed solution will provide grade
school students with digital credentials to protect them when they’re
surfing the Web and to help develop future “safe-use” case studies for
children using the Internet for research and other school projects.
Such certificates are commonly stored on computers, and in conjunction
with username and password, they provide assurance that a given individual,
on a given machine, is an authorized user with a registered identity.
“We needed technology that could help protect and empower the safety
of our nation’s youth, and VeriSign was able to provide it,” says Schroeder.
“VeriSign will allow i-SAFE to provide security through their current
digital certificate, which has been widely accepted within the online
financial market.”
A “simple” digital-certificate
solution would not suffice for Schroeder, however, since students tend
to access the Internet from multiple machines. Instead, VeriSign intends
to house digital certificates on USB Hybrid tokens, which are small
enough for students to carry on a keychain. i-SAFE dubs the tokens “i-STIKs,”
and the i-STIK solution will be rolled out as part of a pilot project
to all of the schools in Nebraska, Florida, North Dakota, Virginia,
Colorado, and Kentucky that are participating in i-SAFE’s education
programs. School administrators will distribute the tokens after validating
a student’s credentials, and i-SAFE will educate students in their use.
i-STIKs will only transmit a student’s gender and age range in addition
to the i-STIK’s serial number. Students’ names and other personal information
will be stored in a secure, restricted database linked to each i-STIK’s
unique identifier.
Schroeder sees great
promise in the VeriSign solution. “The system provides two important
benefits,” says Schroeder. “If someone were to impersonate a registered
student, that would constitute identity theft, and there are laws already
enacted for this. Also, if a student were to lose an i-STIK, administrators
would easily be able to revoke the digital certificate and issue a new
one without having to change the student’s user ID or password.” In
addition, the solution allows for easy revocation of the credentials
when students transfer, graduate, or are no longer enrolled in the school.
Schroeder chose
VeriSign because of its strong reputation in the security sphere, and
she feels that VeriSign offers strong technology to back up that reputation.
“I believe that VeriSign was instrumental in our garnering government
support for this project,” says Schroeder. “VeriSign’s solution addresses
many factors that Congress was looking for with regard to protecting
students online. This solution not only protects their privacy, but
it also gives them the power to choose whom they wish to chat with online.”
A Safer World
Once the pilot is complete, Schroeder hopes to expand the i-STIK nationwide.
Recently, i-SAFE demonstrated the solution to the Department of Commerce,
showing how the i-STIK can be used to provide safe, two-way communication
between youth under the age of 13 who use the kids.us top-level domain.
i-SAFE is also working on a distribution system whereby students whose
schools do not participate in i-SAFE’s programs will be able to acquire
i-STIKs from their local post office with parental consent. In the future,
Schroeder says that i-SAFE hopes to extend its outreach activities to
the youth of Africa and other nations with limited access to technology.
“We needed technology
that could help protect and empower the safety of our nation’s youth,
and VeriSign was able to provide it.” — Teri Schroeder, President and
CEO, i-SAFE America
i-SAFE Profile
Industry: Education/Outreach
Challenge: Provide a system to reliably validate the age of
students online
Solution: VeriSign’s Unified Authentication
Results
- i-SAFE can easily manage the distribution of certificates over a secure
Web interface.
- Using portable USB Hybrid tokens for authentication, students can
roam from machine to machine.
- The system effectively screens out unauthorized users.
- i-SAFE can authenticate students using any machine on any platform.
- VeriSign’s reputation helped i-SAFE to garner government support.
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A New Look For 2005
By Melanie Branon
Vice President, Branding and Marketing Communications
When you pay a visit
to the VeriSign Web site, or take a glance at one or two of our recent
advertisements, then you might have noticed that there is something
new happening at VeriSign. We have a new image—one that reflects the
dynamic role we play in today’s society. In October 2004, we launched
a new brand campaign featuring a consistent use of color (we call it
“cranberry red”) and graphics (the check mark and dotted lines signifying
connections) that unite the VeriSign brand across all of our products
and around the world. Like any large corporation, we rely on strong
brand elements to more consistently communicate our identity, but for
VeriSign, our new look is not just skin-deep. What are we driving at
with this new image that we’re sporting?
As the only company
with substantial expertise in Internet, security, and telecommunications
infrastructures, VeriSign has been known as many things to many people.
But today, as the evolution to a digital economy gains speed, VeriSign
is in a truly unique position to bridge multiple networks, technologies,
and protocols—we are “where it all comes together.” Our new brand reflects
the message that VeriSign operates the intelligent infrastructure services
that enable businesses and people to find, connect, secure, and transact
across today’s complex, global networks.
As our capabilities
become more integrated to address the converged marketplace, our “look-and-feel”
reflects that unified approach. In addition to using consistent colors
and design elements, our materials show people interacting with technology,
and our graphics show connections being made from one device to another
across myriad protocols and networks, illustrating how we can facilitate
the secure interoperability of multiple technologies. We hope
you like our new look, but even more, we hope you take the time to learn
more about how we provide the intelligent infrastructure and unique
solutions to mitigate today’s increasingly complex network environments.
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VeriSign and Ziff Davis Conduct Roundtable
Discussions on Phishing and Compliance
By Deanne Martin
Corporate Marketing Events Manager, VeriSign
VeriSign takes an
active role in the advance of the IT Security industry by co-hosting
roundtable discussions on current security issues. In October, VeriSign
and the Ziff Davis Custom/Conference Group held two such roundtables:
One on the growing problem of phishing, and another that centered on
complying with legislation. These discussions followed an open format
that allowed all attendees to participate, but each was moderated by
subject-matter experts, to keep the conversation on track and moving
forward.
No Phishing Allowed
“Phishing” is a security concern that affects both individuals and businesses.
Such attacks use fraudulent email appearing to originate from banks
and other financial institutions to trick users into divulging sensitive
account information. Joe Panettieri, editorial director for Ziff Davis
Media’s Custom/Conference Group and a prominent technology journalist,
moderated the phishing round table (October 21st, 2004, Intercontinental
Barclay Hotel, New York). He opened the discussion with two alarming
statistics: In 2004, phishing incidents rose 250 percent from March
to April, and another 215 percent from April to May (Source: FraudWatch
International). After a brief discussion of some of the common characteristics
of phishing attempts, participants introduced themselves and listed
two of their top challenges related to this growing problem. Panettieri
then led participants through a detailed discussion during which participants
exchanged strategies used to defend against this growing problem. Attendees
told Panettieri that anti-spam technology alone wasn’t enough to combat
phishing. In particular, participants were seeking managed security
services that could identify, halt and report phishing attempts to the
proper authorities in a timely, proactive manner. In addition to evaluating
and embracing managed security services, participants shared several
other best practices for combating phishing incidents, including:
- Timely updates to HR handbooks provided to all company employees,
- Clearly communicated corporate email and Web use policies. Typically,
these policies are included in HR manuals, on corporate intranets and
in written company memos distributed twice annually to all employees,
and
- Timely and regular communications with customers, partners and consultants
who might otherwise fall victim to phishing attempts.
Complying with Compliance
CIOs are constantly under pressure to maintain compliance with government
legislation such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), the Gramm-Leach-Blily Act, and
California SB 1386. Many companies have had to pay heavy penalties for
failing to properly secure their IT infrastructure—some in fees, and
others through unnecessary exposure to threats. Panettieri, who also
moderated the roundtable discussion on compliance (September 15, 2004,
San Francisco; and October 20, 2004, Chicago) began with the statistic
that as many as 20% of CIOs are not involved in compliance. Attendees
also learned that CEOs and CFOs can face up to $5 million in fines and
20 years in jail for non-compliance related offenses.
Attendees discussed
each other’s primary pain points related to compliance, and these included
auditing, user access rights, revenue recognition, ASP/ISP issues, debit
cards, credit card compliance, Web site protection, and protection of
the corporate brand and image. The discussion then turned to best practices
for maintaining compliance, including garnering support from upper management
using audits, risk assessments, and negative press coverage. The participants
discussed the intricacies of federated ID management and two-factor
authentication. All involved left the discussion with a much clearer
sense of the importance of compliance, and with a more focused sense
of how to proceed in their compliance efforts.
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VeriSign Presents at NetworkWorldFusion Security
Seminar Series
By Melissa Lavigne
Marketing Manager, VeriSign
Network World newsweekly
produces a cutting-edge security seminar series that draws network security
professionals from all over the globe, including many prominent CEOs,
CIOs, and CSOs. The most recent series, entitled “Network Security:
Structuring an Aggressive Defense,” toured Houston, Washington, D.C.,
Seattle, and New York, and offered especially comprehensive information,
insight, and discussion.
No organization
can afford to wait for an attack before implementing a security strategy,
since a single attack can cause substantial financial damage, harm the
company brand and customer relationships, or even shut down an organization
completely. Security professionals are becoming aware that the only
effective security strategy is a proactive one, a strategy that anticipates
and prepares for attacks before they occur. However, organizations can
employ many different security strategies, and many security professionals
are uncertain about which are likely to be the most effective.
The seminar addressed
these and other concerns by offering concrete, hands-on experience from
security professionals who are leaders in their respective fields. Attendees
also had an opportunity to share their experiences and advice drawn
from hands-on experience in the “trenches” of network security. Topics
ranged from the pros and cons of various security architectures, to
the best methods for securing virtual private networks (VPNs), to the
subtleties of authentication and public key infrastructure (PKI). Mark
Griffiths, VeriSign’s Vice President of Authentication Services, and
Sundar Krishnamurthy, Product Manager of VeriSign’s Email Security Service,
presented a section entitled “Measuring the Success of Your Spam and
Virus Protection Solution.”
The seminar helped
participants to:
- Prepare a seamless security system comprised of well integrated elements
- Build layers of defense at multiple points in a corporate network
- Combine and orchestrate today’s most-effective solutions
- Aggregate and analyze assets to proactively defend a network
- Benchmark a security architecture against industry best practices
“Network Security:
Structuring an Aggressive Defense” provided a wealth of intelligence,
opportunities, and advice in one highly productive day. Participation
in this event is free of charge to qualified professionals (Advance
reservation is always required for complimentary attendance), so be
sure to keep an eye out for registration information for next year’s
event!
For more information,
see the NetworkWorldFusion
Web site
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Events Listing
Stay ahead of the
curve by attending one or more of the following security-oriented events.
VeriSign Web Seminars
February 9th
VeriSign®
Email Security Service Web Seminar, hosted by SearchSecurity.com (TechTarget)
Companies are spending
money on complying with SOX, HIPAA, GLB, and SEC 17a3-4. However,
many are realizing that the initial costs are but a small portion of
the total cost to maintain systems and processes. Service providers,
however, can provide trusted support to meet ongoing compliance initiatives
and maximize profits. In this Web seminar, VeriSign will discuss the
ramifications of compliance and corporate governance as it pertains
to Information Security. While some organizations view compliance
as an ongoing “tax” on IT resources, others have used it as leverage
to further protect corporate assets that reside inside the data center.
Outsourcing some compliance initiatives has allowed for organizations
to shift their focus towards generating a greater return on these information
assets.
February 23rd
VeriSign
Internet Security Intelligence Briefing
VeriSign’s widespread
intelligent infrastructure provides an unparalleled view into emerging
threats across the entire Internet, including detailed statistics on
e-commerce activity. VeriSign reports on intelligence drawn from the
global Domain Name System (DNS) as well as VeriSign’s Authentication
Services, Managed Security Services, Payment Services, and Fraud Protection
Services. During this free Web Seminar on VeriSign’s Q4 2004 data, you
will learn about the growing usage trends in e-commerce and the Internet,
in addition to valuable information about e-commerce fraud. The briefing
also identifies the peak days in the holiday shopping season and analyzes
the e-commerce growth sustained into Q1 2005 by online merchants.
March 15th
Ensuring Messaging Continuity in the Enterprise: A VeriSign® Email Security
Services Web seminar hosted by SearchExchange (TechTarget)
Today, email security
is mostly confined to spam filtering and virus scanning. But since email
is a mission-critical business application, enterprises must focus on
a broader, more comprehensive “messaging continuity” strategy that secures
email systems from disasters and disruptions. This Web seminar will
discuss approaches and alternatives for disaster recovery, email availability
and attack prevention.
Registration information
is not yet available for this event. Visit SearchExchange.com,
after February 15th, to register.
Upcoming Conferences
January 23rd – 27th
Lotusphere
Walt Disney World Resort, Orlando, Florida
This four-day conference
delivers a comprehensive view into Notes, Domino, and the entire Lotus
product portfolio, as well as the WebSphere Portal product line, Pervasive
Computing technology, and the IBM Workplace. VeriSign will showcase
enhancements to its Email Security Service.
February 14th – 18th
RSA
Conference 2005
Moscone Center, San Francisco, California
The RSA Conference
is one of the most authoritative resources for organizations seeking
to secure their systems against cyber-criminals. Visit VeriSign at booth
#704 and the OATH Partner Booth at booth #930. Be sure to catch the
special keynote session by VeriSign president and CEO Stratton Sclavos.
VeriSign is also hosting an exclusive customer event, invitation only,
on Wednesday, February 16. Contact Melissa Lavigne (mlavigne@verisign.com)
for more information.
March 6th – 8th
Computerworld
Premier100
JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort, Scottsdale, Arizona
At this event, you
will have an opportunity to learn from Computerworld magazine’s Premier
100 IT Leaders and Alumni.
March 15th -17th
Electronic
Transactions Association (ETA) Annual Meeting
Mirage Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada
The ETA serves the
needs of organizations that offer transaction processing products and
services. ETA is now an international association with over 400 member
companies from seven different countries.
May 9th – 12th
Digital
ID World
Hyatt Regency Embarcadero, San Francisco, California
Sponsored by VeriSign,
Digital ID World 2005 is packed with 40 insightful hours of workshops,
tutorials, and panels on bringing identity to your business. Learn about
technologies and strategies that will help you address:
- IT Availability and Business Continuity
- Business Partner Integration and Supply Chain Management
- The Ongoing Erosion of User Confidence
- Dynamic Management of Corporate Resources
The global identity
community of vendors, analysts, academics, and media coalesces into
a singular “identity ecosystem” at Digital ID World. The benefits are
as unique as the event.
June 6th – 8th
Gartner
IT Security Summit
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, DC
This comprehensive
conference covers the latest in security technologies, and provides
comprehensive advice on building business cases for information security
budget requests, complying with complex legislation, disaster recovery,
and business continuity planning.
July 13th – 15th
Catalyst
North America
Manchester Grand Hyatt, San Diego, California
The Catalyst Conference
is an annual, three-day educational event offering four tracks: Application
Platform Strategies, Identity and Privacy Strategies, Network and Telecom
Strategies, and Security and Risk Management Strategies.
August 21st – 23rd
Aspen
Summit
The St. Regis, Aspen, Colorado
The Aspen Summit
2005 is the Progress & Freedom Foundation’s annual gathering of
the digital world’s most prominent business leaders, probing thinkers,
and influential policymakers.
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