London: IBM on Wednesday unveiled new analytics using advanced security intelligence that can flag suspicious behavior in network activities to help better defend against hidden threats facing organizations.
As organizations open up their networks to smartphones and increased social media access, traditional security defenses alone such as firewalls and antivirus software can’t adequately protect an organization. According to the 2011 IBM X-Force Trend and Risk Report,adversaries ramped up social engineering attacks and X-Force witnessed mobile exploits increased by 19 percent in 2011. Firewalls and traditional security products do little against advanced threats that use unreported techniques or that have already invaded an organization.
To address this, IBM is announcing the QRadar Network Anomaly Detection appliance that analyzes complex network activity in real-time, detecting and reporting activity that falls outside normal baseline behavior. The analytics not only can look at inbound attacks but also can detect outbound network abnormalities where malware may have already infected a “zombie” system to send data outside the organization.
“Advanced attackers are both patient and clever, leaving just a whisper of their presence, and evading many network protection and detection approaches,” said Marc van Zadelhoff, vice president of Strategy and Product Management, IBM Security Systems. “Most organizations don’t even know they have been infected by malware. An advantage of IBM analytics is that it can detect the harbingers of new attacks from the outside or reveal covert malicious activity from the inside.”
Using advanced behavioral algorithms, the QRadar Network Anomaly Detection appliance analyzes disparate data that can collectively indicate an attack – network and traffic flows, intrusion prevention system (IPS) alerts, system and application vulnerabilities, and user activity. It quantifies several risk factors to help evaluate the significance and credibility of a reported threat, such as the business value and vulnerabilities of targeted resources.
By applying behavioral analytics and anomaly detection, the application can flag abnormal events such as:
· Outbound network traffic detected to countries where the company does not have business affairs;
· FTP traffic observed in a department that doesn’t regularly use FTP services; and
· A known application running on a non-standard port or in areas where it is not allowed (e.g. unencrypted traffic running in secure areas of the network).
The new QRadar Network Anomaly Detection appliance leverages the QRadar Security Intelligence Platform and is designed to complement IBM SiteProtector and IBM Network Security IPS deployments. The new appliance also receives a threat intelligence feed from IBM X-Force research, providing insight into suspect entities on the Internet based upon knowledge of more than 15 billion Web pages and images, The X-Force IP Reputation Feed provides QRadar Network Anomaly Detection with a real-time list of potentially malicious IP addresses – including malware hosts, spam sources and other threats. If the product sees any traffic to or from these sites, it can immediately alert the organization and provide rich contextual information about the activity.
About IBM Security
Q1 Labs was acquired by IBM in October 2011, and serves as a cornerstone of IBM’s new Security Systems division. IBM’s security portfolio provides the security intelligence to help organizations holistically protect their people, data, applications and infrastructure. IBM offers solutions for identity and access management, security information and event management, database security, application development, risk management, endpoint management, network security and more.
IBM operates the world’s broadest security research and development organization and delivery organization. This comprises nine security operations centers, nine IBM Research centers, 11 software security development labs and an Institute for Advanced Security with chapters in the United States, Europe and Asia Pacific. IBM monitors 13 billion security events per day in more than 130 countries and holds more than 3,000 security patents.
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