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WannaCry Attack and Proactive Threat Detection | Niagara Networks

By: Niagara Networks May 19, 2017

Organizations across the world are still continuing to come to terms with last week’s massive “WannaCry” ransomware attack, which crippled IT infrastructure on an unprecedented scale. In this post, we examine the nature and impact of this threat and why it requires pervasive and advanced network visibility for dynamic threat detection and remediation.

5 Tips to Maximize ROI in Network Visibility Platforms | Niagara Networks

By: Niagara Networks May 17, 2017

As communication networks — the internet in particular — continue to evolve, enterprises must adopt new and efficient technologies, such as cloud computing and virtualization, to improve their networks’ monitoring, security, and overall network visibility.

To SPAN or Not to SPAN | Niagara Networks

By: Niagara Networks February 10, 2017

Whether you’ve been in the IT, Network Monitoring, or Network Security industries for a short period or for a long period, you’ve probably been asked, “to SPAN or not to SPAN?" Today’s your lucky day because you will learn how to best answer this question both for yourself and for the next time a colleague or prospect asks you.

On the 12th Day of Visibility, I Improved the Internet | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 27, 2017

Improving the Internet: A Call to Action I took a seminar taught by a retired U.S. Army Command Sergeant Major with a PhD in Organizational Psychology.

On Day 11, I Created a Vision: Visibility Everywhere | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 24, 2017

When the founders of Gigamon first described their, as they called it, Data Access Switch, a lot of observers (including myself) thought it was a clever idea. We also thought it would be strictly a niche use case, likely to be absorbed into the incumbent vendors’ existing switch/routing product lines.

On Day 10 of Visibility, I Reinvented the Internet | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 18, 2017

Reinventing the Internet is a Silly Idea The Internet carries with it many problems, and over the decades, a large number of people have discussed reinventing the Internet. Some of these efforts have had a significant impact on the networking world. For example, IPv6 was created to solve the problem with the growth in Internet-connected computers and other devices, as we were going to run out of IPv4 addresses. IPv6 is happening, but at a much slower pace than its proponents intende...

Day 9 of Network Visibility | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 17, 2017

A Contrary View: The internet (ARPANET) was designed to be secure Every couple of years, the media is full of articles, conference discussions, and blog posts about reinventing the internet. There are some valid reasons for these conversations. However, the one that I hear often is the one that offers the vaguest explanation: “The internet wasn’t designed for today’s scale”, meaning that the internet, or more precisely, its predecessor ARPANET wasn’t designed for security.

On Day 8 of Visibility, I Discovered My First Spam | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 13, 2017

Ontogeny Recapitulates Phylogeny I don’t mean that I sent one, I mean one that I received. In the 1970s, I worked for Honeywell Information Systems in technical marketing for the Multics operating system. Some of you may have heard about the system or studied it in college. It was a collaboration among AT&T Bell Laboratories, GE’s computer business (subsequently acquired by Honeywell) and MIT, with funding from ARPA (later renamed DARPA), to build a “C...

Day 7 of Network Visibility | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss January 04, 2017

One of the healthy things about the Software-Defined Networking (SDN) movement has been that WAN and LAN network engineers are finding common ground.

Day 6 of Network Visibility | Niagara Networks

By: Harry Quackenboss December 30, 2016

When the legendary Admiral Grace Hopper would give a talk, she often handed out pieces of wire 11.8” in length, and educate her audience about the amount of time it took for electrons to traverse the length of the wire: 1/1,000,000,000 of a second, or, to round off a bit, electrons travel about one foot every nanosecond. In other words, it’s the same as the speed of light through free space.