Cigent Technology, Inc. has announced the Cigent Secure SSD+ with ransomware prevention capabilities.
SSD Uses AI to Secure Your Data From Ransomware Attacks : Read more
SSD Uses AI to Secure Your Data From Ransomware Attacks : Read more
Ransomware is almost entirely the result of clueless user action.What this industry has come to invent to try to make up for Microsoft's abysmal security practices never ceases to amaze me
defend is basically good as many 3rd party anti virus now-a-days.make up for Microsoft's abysmal security practices
In this case though, it sounds like the monitoring software will pop up a message when the hardware blocks access, and allow the user to override it. There's not really any reason Intel couldn't do something similar. Of course, false positives could disrupt business, particularly if they require someone to look into what's happening and perform multi-factor authentication once they've determined that it's not a threat.I'm reminded that Intel bought McAfee back in 2011, saying the same sorts of things about putting anti-virus into the hardware. The problem with that is false-positives. When it happens at a software level, you can just get an annoying pop-up or whatever. But, if your hardware decides something is a virus and just decides to abort, then it looks & acts pretty much like a random failure.
Except there's been Linux ransomware too.What this industry has come to invent to try to make up for Microsoft's abysmal security practices never ceases to amaze me
What "abysmal" security practices?What this industry has come to invent to try to make up for Microsoft's abysmal security practices never ceases to amaze me
Not really for server apps, where increased security would have the greatest business value.In this case though, it sounds like the monitoring software will pop up a message when the hardware blocks access, and allow the user to override it. There's not really any reason Intel couldn't do something similar.