One of the main components of the Security Enterprise Program is the
Security Quarterly Report — which is published 4 times a year.
The 451 Security Quarterly Reports
provide a review of enterprise security in the previous
quarter and a preview of what is to come, plus a deep dive
into an issue of compelling interest to security vendors,
investors and end-users
Dramatic shifts in how applications are consumed and delivered, combined with the fraying of the network perimeter, have created the need for an access policy framework. It is an ‘adapt or die’ moment for identity management, but uncertainty still pervades how the transition will unfold.
With malicious code mushrooming and auditors looming, enterprises are ready to call in the experts. This report examines the future direction of both managed security and security SaaS offerings.
The report focuses on the business processes, business practices and culture of the anti-data-leakage (ADL) space. It proffers a specific framework to help executives discover exactly how it is that their organization goes about doing what it does to make money, serve its constituents or educate its student body, and how to assess the risk and impact of leakage or theft of data at any part of that process chain.
In this report, The 451 Group takes measure of the NAC industry by looking at its history, at how it has evolved in the past five years, and at some of the forces that will transform the market for access control products in the months to come.
This report explores new directions for transaction security technologies. It defines the business issues pushing enterprises toward broader adoption of transaction security technologies, the subsectors within the emerging transaction security market, the problems each class of technology hopes to solve and how the technology addresses the problem. It provides anoverview of enterprise IAM as it currently stands, and how it will look in the next 18 months.
Enterprises are looking into a fire hose of data as they attempt to monitor and react to security threats. Every application and piece of network gear contributes to the flood of security event data. An entire industry has sprung up to support security analysts lost in this overwhelming data flow. This report takes an in-depth look at the source of the problem, which begins with the proliferation of log data from the likes of firewalls, virtual private networks (VPNs), intrusion-prevention systems (IPS), intrusion-detection systems (IDS) and anti-malware. It then looks at the technologies and products offered to relieve the strain.