Tag Archives: intc

Cisco Lobs Firewall Barbs To Whack Palo Alto, Check Point, Fortinet

Networking firm Cisco Systems ( CSCO ) was slated to mount a cybersecurity charge Tuesday, unveiling a next-generation firewall to squash  Palo Alto Networks ( PANW ), Check Point Software Technology ( CHKP ), Fortinet ( FTNT ) and Intel ( INTC )-owned McAfee. Protecting digital data is a $19 billion opportunity over the next 10 years, Dave Stuart, Cisco’s director of product marketing, told IBD. Cisco’s Firepower Next-Generation Firewall will capture some of those billions, he says. “We believe this level of integration is unprecedented in the environment,” Stuart says. “Competitors . . . miss that opportunity to correlate information to shrink that time-to-detection rapidly in the market.” Tech Giants Battle Pure Players In Security Stuart’s words are merely the latest barb lobbed against pure players in the  cybersecurity battle for market share . Broad-based tech giants IBM ( IBM ), Cisco, Dell and Microsoft ( MSFT ) have made hefty investments in recent years to carve out security sales, going up against each other and companies that focus solely on security wares. On Wednesday, Cisco posted fiscal Q2  results, saying its security sales for the quarter ended Jan. 23 rose 11% from the year-earlier quarter, to $462 million. Cisco’s overall revenue was flat. For the first half of fiscal 2016, Cisco’s $947 million in security sales rose 9%, to $947 million. Cisco’s half-year security revenue already eclipses the total 2015 sales for CyberArk Software ( CYBR ), Proofpoint ( PFPT ),  FireEye ( FEYE ) and Palo Alto Networks, and is nearing Fortinet, which reported $1.01 billion in 2015 sales. And security made up just 4% of Cisco’s $11.8 billion in total fiscal Q2 revenue. “We clearly have our efforts behind security,” Stuart said. “The opportunity is not lost on our adversaries either.” Industrywide, a breach is generally detected within 100 days, Stuart says. He says Cisco’s technology shrank that to 17.5 hours, down from 46 hours in the prior quarter. Firepower pulls intelligence from across that technology to detect a breach. Firepower Deletes ‘Human’ Element As Stuart describes it, upon a breach, the Firepower management center forces the “stranger-host” into a contained environment. The process is automated — it doesn’t require “back-end analysis with humans,” Stuart said. “We are providing the best of breed on the IPS (intrusion prevention system) side, advanced breach detection on the malware side and leading third-party platforms,” he said. “All that goes into a platform that is best of breed and doesn’t force that choice between products.” Last year, Cisco acquired security vendor OpenDNS for $635 million, adding to its $2.7 billion Sourcefire acquisition in 2013. Via OpenDNS, Firepower can detect malicious online activity and then “instruct the URL to batten down,” Stuart said. “That’s the integration we’ve built into the platform now,” he said. “It really does differentiate us.” Firepower’s code is a singular code. Adding third-party layers will require joint efforts among security teams to ensure that the new code is up to snuff, Stuart said, adding, “We’re not opening this up for anybody to write their code onto it.” Segmentation Advisory Launched In conjunction with the Firepower announcement, Cisco was set to unveil its Security Segmentation Service, an advisory service designed to examine a client’s data for weaknesses, and then create a customized security approach. But that doesn’t mean Cisco is necessarily peddling its segmentation solution, TrustSec, Stuart says. Cisco competes in the segmentation market against pure players like Fortinet and Symantec ( SYMC ). The advisory service is merely a design jumping point, Stuart said. “We start with a workshop,” he said. “After about 60 days we discern what their business and compliance issues are. That goes essentially into building a design for segmentation.” Stuart acknowledges that Cisco is a newer entrant to the cybersecurity market. Switching, routing and collaboration remain its largest chunks of revenue, bringing $3.48 billion, $1.85 billion and $1.02 billion, respectively, in total fiscal Q2 sales. Cisco long has been the No. 1 maker of networking gear. Rivals “have been in the next-generation firewall space for a while,” he said. “I might add, some of the vendors providing sand-boxing are trying to expand their portfolios into prevention and remediation. We’re way ahead on them in terms of those aspects.”

AT&T Fires Back On 5G Amid Verizon Push, Touts 5G To Homes

Aiming to grab some 5G limelight back from Verizon Communications ( VZ ), AT&T ( T ) announced on Friday plans for trials of next-generation 5G wireless technology in 2016 and, in a surprise, touted 5G services to fixed locations such as homes and businesses, not mobile devices. Verizon ( VZ ) in September declared its intention to be a global leader , and the first in the U.S., in rolling out a 5G wireless network commercially. AT&T has been less vocal, but on Friday CEO Randall Stephenson said in a CNBC interview that 5G speeds could potentially match fiber-optic connections to homes. “Actually, we are getting performance and testing that says that we can get as good a performance off 5G wireless technology into the home as we’re getting off fiber today,” he told CNBC. On its Q4 earnings conference call on Jan. 21, Verizon also hinted at fixed broadband. “We would hope that the FCC moves quickly to adopt the rules to facilitate 5G deployment,” said Verizon CFO Fran Shammo. “(When you) think about 5G, it may not just be about mobility. It may be about other use cases; it’s not just about mobility.” AT&T agreed to deploy fixed broadband services to homes in rural areas using 4G technology as part of conditions tied to its acquisition of satellite TV broadcaster DirecTV Group in July. On Friday, AT&T  said that it will test 5G technologies in Austin, Texas, with Intel ( INTC ) and   Ericsson ( ERIC ). AT&T says that it sees a role for 5G in “virtual reality, self-driving cars, robotics and smart cities.” Tech Standards For 5G Wireless Not Yet Set AT&T says that it expects 5G speeds to be anywhere from 10 to 100 times faster than 4G LTE connections, much as Verizon has stated. Verizon has said that it plans to deploy 5G commercially in 2017, though its plans are still vague. AT&T said it expects to deploy 5G after standards are set. “We’re conducting our 5G trials in such a way that we’ll be able to pivot to compliant commercial deployments once 5G technology standards are set. The international standards body, 3GPP, will likely complete the first phase of that process in 2018,” the company said in a press r elease . Europe, South Korea, Japan and China all have 5G initiatives under way. South Korea plans large-scale 5G testing around the 2018 Winter Olympics. In Japan,  NTT DoCoMo ( DCM ) is gearing up for the 2020 Summer Olympics. The next World Radiocommunication Conference, where 5G spectrum allocation is expected to be discussed, isn’t until 2019. Many countries, including the U.S., are looking at high frequencies, such as 24 GHz and 37 GHz, for 5G services. However, 5G could surface earlier in bands below 6 GHz, some analysts say.  In that case, networks could continue using interfaces designed for LTE gear. Also, 5G marketing battles could start long before higher-bandwidth 5G services are ready commercially.

Cisco, Sony Deals Herald Internet Of Things M&A Boom, Says Report

Cisco Systems ’ ( CSCO ) purchase of Jasper Technologies and Sony’s acquisition of chipmaker Altair Semiconductor could be the start of an Internet-of-Things buying spree in 2016, says a Strategy Analytics report. “IoT M&A activity could potentially reach the $20 billion mark in 2016,” says Strategy Analytics. IoT refers to wireless technology that connects industrial, medical, automotive and consumer devices to the Web. Cisco agreed to buy IoT software platform provider Jasper for  $1.4 billion last week. Privately held Jasper’s CEO, Jahangir Mohammed, will run Cisco’s new IoT software business unit. Sony ( SNE ) in late January agreed to buy Israel-based Altair for about $212 million. Altair makes low-power, high-performance modem chips and related LTE technology, a 4G smartphone standard. In many cases, IoT involves analysis of data streams sent from sensor-equipped devices. AT&T ( T ) in January said it would partner with Cisco, Ericsson, General Electric ( GE ), IBM ( IBM ), Intel ( INTC ) and Qualcomm ( QCOM ) to expand its “smart cities” initiative for Web-connected devices. Verizon Communications ( VZ ), meanwhile, has developed software tools for IoT applications. The Strategy Analytics report says that security will be a big issue for companies deploying IoT systems. The report forecasts strong growth in IoT-related analytics software.