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| Can the infosec industry keep the wheels turning? | | Print | |
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Page 1 of 3 Perhaps it?s apt that Symantec chose ?Hamlet? as the code name for its Endpoint Protection Version 11. After all, the infamous, indecisive prince of Shakespeare?s tragic tale suffered from longing ambition and a failure to vanquish his enemies to achieve his ultimate aims. The same might be said not just of Symantec, but of the entire security industry as it tries to sort out its ultimate composition.
Since its 2004 merger with Veritas, critics have charged that the world?s largest security company has lost its focus as it has broadened its horizons into storage management software. Longtime customers and partners have complained bitterly about the decline in quality in Symantec?s security technology and support. Earlier this year, Symantec?s resellers were in near revolt over the bloated Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition 10, calling it an ineffective, unmanageable ?resource hog.? Hamlet is designed to restore confidence in Symantec?s security products.
?We?re trying to be more cognizant of users and their resources,? says George Myers, a Symantec Director of Product Management on the Hamlet project. ?None of these technologies is a silver bullet, which is why you need layered technologies.?
Symantec Endpoint Protection combines the power of multiple security technologies?software firewall, antivirus and malware protection and intrusion prevention?in a package with a significantly smaller footprint that its predecessor. It reportedly will have a 21MB footprint as opposed to the nearly 100MB of space required for Version 10.
Symantec hopes its new release will help squelch its critics. Some customers and?no surprise?competitors blamed Symantec?s security product woes on a lack of focus. Since the 2004 merger with Veritas, Symantec has spent most of its energy on the storage market and lost its way on security, critics charge. While Symantec made key strategic acquisitions to bolster its security offerings?such as the purchase of Sygate for its endpoint security and Altiris for configuration management?it completely abandoned the security hardware market and the rapidly growing unified threat management appliance market.
It?s criticism that Symantec CEO John Thompson shrugs off. ?People certainly have an opinion about what we should or shouldn?t do, but we?re focused on helping customers better manage and protect their information,? says Thompson. |