BlackBerry announces new endpoint and network security capabilities

This week, BlackBerry announced it’s extending its detection and response (XDR) strategy with two new cybersecurity innovations, BlackBerry Optics 3.0 and BlackBerry Gateway, built on prevention-first and AI-driven approach.

BlackBerry Gateway, the company’s first AI-empowered Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) product designed to provide a company with network security as a service from all of its endpoints and to all of its cloud access points and on-prem resources, will be available this month.

“Traditional endpoint security alone is not enough to tackle the sophisticated threat landscape. Our end-to-end approach to cybersecurity is deeply rooted in Cylance AI and ML to provide enhanced visibility and protection against current and future cyberthreats,” said Billy Ho, executive vice-president of product engineering at BlackBerry, in a press release.

Simply put, Gateway’s Zero Trust architecture helps organizations reduce network access risk by assuming every user, endpoint, and network is potentially hostile until identity is authenticated. The company says as it builds out its XDR architecture, Gateway would provide ZTNA telemetry data that would be added to the cloud data lake.

New data from HP’s latest Blurred Lines & Blindspots study revealed 95 per cent of Canadian IT decision-makers believe employees using personal devices for work, despite them not being built with business security in mind, has increased their company’s risk of a security breach.  

BlackBerry says Gateway will let remote users establish secure network connectivity from any device, managed or unmanaged, to any app, public or private cloud across any network, managed or unmanaged.

Related:

Are you making zero progress on Zero Trust? Here’s how to get started

 

With Optics 3.0, BlackBerry’s next-generation cloud-based endpoint detection and response (EDR) solution which is underpinned by cloud-native architecture and Advanced Query capability, Edge AI threat detection and automated response capabilities execute directly on the endpoint device so an incident can be mitigated in near real-time, BlackBerry explained.

Security professionals can then query and analyze the multiple sources of telemetry, alert, and forensic data which gets stored in the cloud data lake along with non-endpoint-related telemetry data, to gain greater visibility and context into an organization’s security environment. The product will be available in Q2 2021.

As part of their XDR roadmap and to enable more efficient and effective detection and response, Ho said the company will continue to add new products and additional sources of security telemetry, such as user behaviour, identity, network, data, application, and cloud to the Optics 3.0 cloud data lake. 

 

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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Pragya Sehgal
Pragya Sehgal
Her characters are bold and smart, but in real life, Pragya is afraid of going upstairs when it is dark behind her. Born and raised in the capital city of India - Delhi - bounded by the Yamuna River on the west, Pragya has climbed the Himalayas, and survived medical professional stream in high school without becoming a patient or a doctor. Pragya now makes her home in Canada with her husband - a digital/online marketing professional who also prepares beautiful, healthy and delicious meals for her. When she isn’t working or writing around tech, she’s probably watching art films on Netflix, or wondering whether she should cut her hair short or not.

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