
By Chris Smith · May 2007
IT networks at today’s colleges and universities are more distributed than ever. Academic networks that spread out allow students and teachers to communicate and interact in new and exciting ways. But at the same time, the networks also pose a challenge to network administrators. Because a highly distributed network allows multiple points of access, it may make academic settings more vulnerable to Botnets, Trojans and other security threats. Because of the increasing amount of threats, vigilant network security is a must.
Located in Columbia, Mo., and founded in 1851, Columbia College is a private, non-profit institution. The college serves almost 25,000 students annually with its campus and graduate studies. More than 1,100 faculty and staff help run operations and educate students.
With 32 extended campuses around the world, including one for military personnel in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Columbia College maintains two highly distributed networks—one for faculty and staff and the other for students. Columbia College network security analyst Jason Youngquist is responsible for the college’s IT security. From Youngquist’s perspective, protecting highly distributed networks is technically challenging enough, not to mention students are not always the most security conscious Internet users. This unique combination makes for a challenging environment.
Working With Challenges
As the sole security professional for Columbia, Youngquist monitors an information security infrastructure that originally included firewalls and an anomaly-based intrusion behavior system for perimeter security, as well as an incumbent vulnerability assessment solution. Youngquist understands many of today’s sophisticated threats can easily bypass both perimeter and desktop defenses to freely propagate throughout internal networks, wreaking havoc on network uptime and possibly compromising critical applications and sensitive data.
When it came time to renew a vulnerability assessment solution, Youngquist discovered the incumbent vendor was no longer the only choice for on-demand vulnerability assessment. Alert Logic matched the incumbent’s vulnerability management capabilities and offered two capabilities the incumbent did not—on-demand network intrusion protection and remote 24/7 network threat monitoring by security experts. With the solution, Youngquist was able to add two layers of additional network security.
About the author
Chris Smith
Chris Smith is the vice president of marketing for Alert Logic.
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