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Intel Security announced the release of an advanced unified defense architecture that aims to empower organizations to more effectively protect the new digital economy in terms of trust, time and money. The company starts from the context that the current economy is no longer just physical, but also based on connected systems and networks in which cyber criminals force everyone to be on the defensive. This new economy has created a world where more than money is at stake and where the public and private sectors struggle against time and struggle to justify trust.
 
"Cybercriminals are forcing cybersecurity companies to rework competition rules to defend the civilized world. To effectively neutralize them, we have to ditch the old security strategy playbooks to be less predictable and more collaborative and make cyber defense a priority,” says Chris Young, Senior VP and General Manager, Intel Security Group. “Our strategy letter is simple but revolutionary: integrate, automate, and orchestrate the threat defense lifecycle to drive better security , ultimately, reduce risk as much as possible, faster and with fewer resources."
 
Built on the industry's largest open ecosystem that leverages a proven integration program, Intel Security's unified defense architecture is powered by four protection systems: Dynamic Endpoint, Pervasive Data Protection, Data Center and Cloud Defense, and Intelligent Security. Operations, which are intelligently integrated to multiply effectiveness. For more information on all the new products announced at the FOCUS 2016 event, visit: http://www.mcafee.com/us/business-home.aspx
 
  
OpenDXL Initiative
 
The industry has long needed a way to make different technologies work better together, and we've paved the way with the most adopted technology among leading companies with McAfee Data Exchange Layer (DXL). To accelerate this, Intel Security announced its intention to open up McAfee Data Exchange Layer (DXL) to the industry as a concrete way to end the hackers' advantage. With an open source strategy and the release of the Beta version of a new SDK (software development kit) for DXL, "white hats" (organizations and technology providers) will be able to integrate into a shared communication fabric in real-time and exchange security information, as well as orchestrate actions to maximize the execution of the threat defense lifecycle. DXL provides a standardized application framework for integrating technologies from different vendors with each other and with in-house developed applications. The OpenDXL initiative will expand the access and capabilities of the DXL SDK and the management and community infrastructure that support it, enabling developers within ISVs, enterprises, colleges, and even competitors to take advantage of the numerous operational benefits and timely integration. real data exchange layer.

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