With the VMware NSX Advanced Load Balancer (Avi), VMware has developed a combined a multi-cloud approach and excellent scalability with strong analytics to help security teams discover threats and remediate them instantly. VMware NSX Advanced Load Balancer (Avi) addresses customers' needs to fully protect their multi-cloud applications with a web application firewall (WAF), bot management, and API (application programming interface) protection based on a built-in analytics engine. The analytics offer visibility into the attacks against the applications, and it’s the basis for the machine learning algorithms that empower customers to make the best possible security decisions. Click here to access all coverage of the 2022 SC Awards.
The solution operates as a true multi-cloud application services platform that lets customers run and protect their applications across on-premises, containers, or public cloud environments. It provides automation and self-service for both network and application teams, simplifying operations and lowering TCO. Workload elasticity and portability is fully supported without compromising on scale or security the application requires. IDC conducted a business value study on VMware customer deployments for all use cases and found the following: 57% three-year ROI; 43% more efficient ADC management; 47% lower cost of operating; 52% low ADC solution cost; 8% higher app dev productivity; 97% faster to scale capacity; 5% months to payback.
An In-Depth Guide to Application Security
Get essential knowledge and practical strategies to fortify your applications.
Increasing concerns regarding the potential utilization of Chinese artificial intelligence platform DeepSeek for foreign government surveillance have prompted New York Gov. Kathy Hochul to ban the AI chatbot's usage across all state-issued devices just days after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a similar prohibition for DeepSeek and Chinese-owned social media apps.
Such an extensive OpenAI account credential theft may have been achieved by exploiting vulnerabilities or securing admin credentials to infiltrate the auth0.openai.com subdomain, according to Malwarebytes researchers, who noted that confirmation of the leak's legitimacy would suggest emirking's access to ChatGPT conversations and queries.
Aside from delivering unencrypted device and mobile app registration information to Volcano Engine servers owned by TikTok parent firm ByteDance, DeepSeek's iOS app has also been leveraging an insecure symmetric encryption algorithm, a hardcoded encryption key, and old initialization vectors, an audit from NowSecure showed.