The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has demonstrated the efficacy of a broad-based, targeted vulnerability scanning and remediation program - for more than 80,000 computers in ten major facilities. In the summer of 1999, the NASA CIO identified approximately 50 of the most serious vulnerabilities whose presence on a computer could be verified by network scanning tools. The CIO purchased and deployed to all Centers a standard suite of network scanning tools, and trained field security staff how to use them.
Related white papers
Introduction to Oracle Identity Management
Oracle Identity Management is an open, extensible, and standards-based infrastructure that can accommodate a wide variety of deployments, partner solutions and customer environments. For example, partner products may leverage Oracle...
Gain a Competitive Advantage by Aligning Your IT Infrastructure with Business Objectives
This paper looks at what IT Security means to your company and how services can assist in the battle against the threats.
Balancing Security Against Productivity
What makes for great security? Is it about keeping the bad guys out or letting the good guys in? About defending attacks or preventing them? When IDG Research Services queried...
Secure Desktop On-Demand Webcast
The desktop or endpoint is one of the most vulnerable parts of your environment. Threats are everywhere. You have users who love to experiment with device settings (only to wonder...
Novell Zenworks Endpoint Security Management: Total Control from a Single Console
Still super gluing your USB ports shut? Unauthorized access to networks, lost or stolen laptops and other mobile hardware, and theft of proprietary information or intellectual property accounted for more...
Ensuring Data Protection for Growing Business
Small and midsize businesses have become increasingly reliant on IT. In this paper, we look at how SMBs often progress through the IT adoption cycle, and some of the operational...
Managing the Windows Vista Migration
As organizations move to Windows Vista, they'll need a migration strategy that keeps conflicts and system disruptions in check, minimizes user downtime and inconvenience, and doesn't expose systems to security...

