Network Security White Papers
A Secure Network for Credit Card Transactions
Overview The Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security Standard (DSS) is a set of requirements developed to help companies avoid these problems by ensuring the security of credit cardholder data. U.S. merchants, as well as those in Europe and Asia doing business with or in the U.S., must now meet minimum levels of security when they process, transmit and/or store cardholder data and personal information throughout a purchase or transaction. In fact, PCI is considered one of the most comprehensive data security standards in a cluster of regulations that have emerged over the past decade. Meeting its requirements, however, is both complicated and expensive for many companies, often necessitating the redesign of basic infrastructures.
| Publisher | Juniper Networks | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | February 2009 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Balancing Security Against Productivity
What makes for great security? Is it about keeping the bad guys out or letting the good guys in? About defending attacks or preventing them? When IDG Research Services queried...
Security: New strides in preventing intrusions.
Need help eliminating risk in your IT environment? This ForwardView webshow describes how security appliances, which incorporate an array of security functions, can help you ward off security breaches without...
MessageLabs Intelligence : 2009 security Predictions
Having analyzed the global threat landscape for almost a decade, MessageLabs Team Skeptic™ is comprised of many world-renowned malware and spam experts who have a global view of threats across...
IDC Vendor Spotlight
Organised ubiquity is a must for organisations to sucessfully "project" their users in any given landspace, at any given time, with secuirty policy. This White Paper covers issues surrounding secure...
Trend Micro Enterprise Security white paper
This white paper reviews the content security threat landscape and how it has evolved into a more dangerous and high risk environment. The paper discussed how conventional content security approaches...



