Sciweavers

IWAN
2004
Springer

Distributed Instrusion Prevention in Active and Extensible Networks

13 years 9 months ago
Distributed Instrusion Prevention in Active and Extensible Networks
The proliferation of computer viruses and Internet worms has had a major impact on the Internet Community. Cleanup and control of malicious software (malware) has become a key problem for network administrators. Effective techniques are now needed to protect networks against outbreaks of malware. Wire-speed firewalls have been widely deployed to limit the flow of traffic from untrusted domains. But these devices weakness resides in a limited ability to protect networks from infected machines on otherwise trusted networks. Progressive network administrators have been using an Intrusion Prevention System (IPS) to actively block the flow of malicious traffic. New types of active and extensible network systems that use both microprocessors and reconfigurable logic can perform wire-speed services in order to protect networks against computer virus and Internet worm propagation. This paper discusses a scalable system that makes use of automated worm detection and intrusion prevention to...
Todd S. Sproull, John W. Lockwood
Added 02 Jul 2010
Updated 02 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where IWAN
Authors Todd S. Sproull, John W. Lockwood
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