Most of the malware that threatens businesses comes from the internet, so it
makes sense to fight it there.
And while hackers were quick to exploit the web as its popularity began to
boom during the 1990s, so were the people who sought to curtail such activities.
Anti-virus vendors came first. Back then their software was the principal way of
fighting malware.
Such vendors were not really dealing with malware in the “cloud” the latest
industry term for internet services but were instead just using the internet
as a way of updating their customers’ computers with new threat definitions as
rapidly as possible.
Spam was endemic, and new ideas were needed by the late 1990s. Jos and Ben
White founded
MessageLabs in the UK
and Scott Petry founded Postini in the US.
Both companies worked on the same idea - destroy spam in the cloud, before it
has a chance to get anywhere near users.
The approach allowed new tactics to be used. Rather than going through the
time-consuming process of identifying every new spam message and creating a
signature for comparison, the approach allowed rogue IP addresses to be
identified.
Vendors could block and blacklist a particular address that was seen to be
the source of spam emails, something that is harder to do if anti-spam software
is installed on each customer’s own premises.
Both companies - MessageLabs and Postini - had their imitators. And both
have diversified their approach to help fight another major threat, web-borne
malware. Such a strategy meant the vendors have had to overcome another problem
which is not really apparent with email latency.
People receiving an email will not be affected by a few seconds’ delay, as
the post is run through a spam filter, making little difference.
But with the internet, latency can have a significant effect. Users clicking
on a web link will find a delay of a few seconds annoying.
Such difference means the early history of filtering web content is not the
same as the approach that has been developed for email spam - and often relies
on in-house provision.
The market leaders in filtering web content,
Websense and Secure
Computing, often sell their software through partners.
That is not to say that providing web defences in the cloud is not possible.
Postini‘s web security service is based on a system from a partner called
ScanSafe, and processes close to 10 billon web requests in the cloud every
month.
Despite the fact that many IT managers still like to keep components of
online defences in-house for reasons of manageability and performance, in
reality the war against malware is being fought and won largely in the cloud.
As a result, many IT security vendors are turning towards a hybrid approach.
Take Trend Micro’s recent
“client-cloud” initiative, where the firm’s Smart Protection Network - a
primarily in-the-cloud service could be replicated in-house using two new
virtual appliances.
You are not short of choices when searching for the anti-malware approach
that best suits your business.
Bob Tarzey is service
director at Quocirca
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