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BorderWare unites e-mail, Web gateways

BorderWare unites e-mail, Web gateways By:  Howard Solomon On: 07 Sep 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

New version of Security Platform runs on one gateway to make it easier to manage, improve security. An industry analyst says its a smart move, but it still won't let the Canadian company catch segment leaders



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A Canadian maker of e-mail and Web security products is trying to break out of its small market share by abandoning the sale of separate gateways in favour of a unified approach.

BorderWare Technologies of Mississauga, Ont. said Monday that its new Security Platform 8.0 e-mail, Web and data loss prevention software runs on one appliance, giving network managers the ability to set security policies for both e-mail and the Web from a single interface.

“We’ve had a (separate) e-mail product and then a Web product, and data loss prevention was applied to both of those as well,” said Shawn Eldridge, the company’s vice-president of corporate marketing. "With the 8.0 release we’ve taken these different gateways and point products and build them as one product.”

As a result, he said, organizations will need fewer personnel to manage gateway security. The merged approach also improves security because many threats combine both e-mail and the Web – for example, an e-mail spam that includes a link to a site with dangerous downloads or graphics.

“It’s the next evolution of the industry,” said Eldridge, who believes BorderWare is the first of the gateway security providers to merge their products.

Gartner analyst Peter Firstbrook, director of the research company’s information security and privacy division, isn't sure, believing that at least one competitor may have done the same. Still, he added, “I think it’s a smart way to go." Administrators are free to dedicate a BorderWare gateway for either e-mail or a Web protection, or have one of each, a strategy that allows the platform to scale for enterprises.

Other competitors still force buyers to purchase more than one gateway for both e-mail and Web. Cisco System’s IronPort, for example, need one box for the gateway and one for the management system, Firstbrook said. BlueCoat’ Sytstems' Web gateway system needs three appliances.

However, he acknowledged that BorderWare is an early mover. “It’s not earth shattering,” he said of the change. “I think it’s a nice release for the company. They’ve converged a lot of functions ahead of a lot of their competitors. The markets still catching up with that, and there’s opportunities.”

But the move will only make BorderWare more competitive against smaller players who sell similar products, he said, not the market leaders. Among e-mail gateway makers, the leaders are IronPort, with 17 per cent of the market, Trend Micro with 12 per cent and Symantec (including its BrightMail division) with 11 per cent. BorderWare trails with less than two per cent. Leading the Web gateway market is WebSense with 34 per cent of the market, followed by BlueCoat with 26 per cent. BorderWare has a negligible share of the market.

Eldridge said expanding BorderWare’s sales is exactly why the company changed strategies, which came after consulting customers. The company’s main targets are small and mid-sized organizations.


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Tags: Platform
Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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Comments (2)

Re: Guru
9/15/2008 12:00:00 AM Due to the nature of articles, issues such as Deployment & Redundancy don?t always get covered. The BorderWare Security Platform is a true platform, and as a platform it can be made up of 1 or Many appliances acting as one large multi-protocol logical device. BorderWare has taken into consideration that email and Web appliances may be deployed at different locations in the LAN, or in fact, in different geographical locations over a WAN, thus has designed the platform to work regardless of the network architecture. As long as all the appliances can communicate to each other over IP they can be deployed and managed anywhere on the network or globally. The main benefit of the platform approach is that a single policy can be used to control content regardless of the protocol, eliminating the need to configure, administer and manage separate email and Web appliances. If you have any further questions in regards to the BorderWare Security Platform, its deployment options, or ?how it works? please feel free to contact me; Steve Gindi BorderWare Technologies Inc. Sr. Product Manager Phone: (905) 804-1855 ext. 254 Toll Free: (877) 814-7900 ext 254 mailto: sgindi@borderware.com
Guru
9/9/2008 12:00:00 AMThis approach ignores the fact that web and email security boxes will normally be placed at different locations within the network - each with a different security model. Any company with more than a few dozen staff who believes that a single box can do both email and web security needs to take a long, hard look at their security model.
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