The convergence and availability of greater numbers of computers, mobile phones, PDAs, and other devices are fueling new opportunities
and new styles of sharing, participation, and commerce. Traditional organizational and network boundaries continue to blur and fade as
organizations find new ways of engaging their customers, partners, suppliers, and employees. Furthermore, the delivery of services is
becoming more streamlined, as associations among components and data become more dynamic in response to âjust in timeâ business
decisions. Unprecedented levels of access and sharing are fast becoming the norm and helping to fuel what is being called âthe
Participation Age.â
Security risk accompanies all of the benefits that these opportunities offer â risk that cannot and must not be ignored. Attacks on IT
resources can now be executed on a global basis, using the Internet or other communications networks, at speed and on a scale
previously unknown. News of identity theft, industrial espionage, and the ever-present insider threat is rapidly increasing. While
many of the common attack methods have largely not changed over the last ten years, their impact has been amplified as a result of
a significantly increased number of potential targets, increased levels of dependence and connectivity among targets, and heightened
levels of attack automation, making the attacks easier to configure and execute on a global scale.
This Sun BluePrints OnLine article addresses the need for strong security guarantees in increasingly dynamic and flexible information
technology (IT) environments. The Sun Systemic Security approach applies time-tested security principles, architectural patterns, and
iterative refinement policies to weave security controls and assurances more systemically throughout an IT environment. Using a
pattern-based approach and a focus on iterative refinement, organizations can transform their existing legacy deployments into
resilient architectures that meet not only their security, privacy, and compliance needs, but also satisfy other business goals, such
as increased agility, flexibility, efficiency, and availability. In fact, this approach can be used to help drive the adoption of new
service and utility-based compute architectures.
Note: This article is available in PDF Format only.
Questions/comments for this article? Ask/tell us.
 to the top  | Â
Â
back to Home  | Â
Â
download PDF format
|