Tivoli Endpoint Manager for mobile devices integrates the assets acquired with BigFix into the IBM portfolio.
Technology giant IBM announced a slate of initiatives to extend
security to the growing number of mobile and instrumented devices
beyond an organization's four walls, such as smartphones, ATMs,
retail kiosks, traffic systems, meters, buildings and sensors. The
company also unveiled research projects, software, and services
partnerships to help organizations better manage the security of their
interconnected and intelligent infrastructures.
Tivoli Endpoint Manager integrates the assets acquired with BigFix into
the IBM portfolio. The software extends IBM's capabilities to manage
the security and compliance of servers, desktops, roaming laptops, and
point-of-sale devices, such as ATMs and self-service kiosks. The
software combines endpoint and security management into a single
solution and enables organizations to see and manage physical and
virtual endpoints.
"From electrical grids to mobile devices, transportation systems and
buildings, the proliferation of these intelligent systems is creating
new security loopholes that businesses need to address," said Steve
Robinson, general manager of IBM Security Solutions. "On today's
smarter planet, everything is an endpoint, and must be managed and
secured like any other critical business asset."
IBM researchers and developers are also prototyping new technologies to
manage security and compliance challenges involving mobile smart
phones, such as Google Android-based devices. Using a single management
platform, organizations will be able to extend management across any
mobile device on their network. The company said with the ability to
install in minutes, customers would be able to remotely set policies,
monitor employee devices to identify potential data compromise and wipe
data off the devices if they are lost or stolen.
The company's security services division and business partner Juniper
Networks, are also delivering joint security services for mobile
devices for platforms such as Apple iOS, Android, Symbian, Blackberry
OS and Windows through the Juniper Networks Junos Pulse Mobile Security
Suite. The service is designed to use IBM's worldwide-managed security
services capability along with mobile security management technology
from Juniper.
In another R&D project, IBM researchers are also identifying ways
to help customers secure instrumented endpoints for smart electrical
meters. By 2015, it is expected that more than 300 million smart meters
will be deployed worldwide, according to an August 2010 Berg Insight
report.
"While smart meters have great potential for cost-savings and
efficiency, their ability to sense and interact with other devices can
also cause them to be vulnerable to security breaches if not managed
correctly," IBM documents explained. "Through this new project, IBM is
now able to demonstrate for clients how software can be used to manage
and secure a meter remotely, while helping to ensure they are also
tamper proof."
By 2015, it's estimated that there will be one trillion connected
devices, many of which will be instrumented with real-time capabilities
to respond quickly and accurately to the environment. As the risks
associated with securing these endpoints grows more complex, the cost
of managing and securing them is escalating rapidly: IT research firm
IDC expects that the endpoint security market will increase at a
compound annual growth rate of 8.3 percent and reach nearly $10 billion
in 2014.
Nathan Eddy is Associate Editor, Midmarket, at eWEEK.com. Before joining eWEEK.com, Nate was a writer with ChannelWeb and he served as an editor at FierceMarkets. He is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.