Break the vicious cycle of IT administration with CoreTrace Endpoint Security
You're pretty sure you didn't sign on to be ‘the patch guy’, but that's what you do now. You patch and update and hope for the best, but you know that no matter how vigilant you are, malware will get through the net. You also didn't expect to be the firefighter behind every arsonist in your organization — those users who install any application they want and then call you to fix the Blue Screen of Death that results when their system crashes. Whether it is malware or unauthorized applications, you have to clean up the mess and very likely make some uncomfortable explanations. If only you have better endpoint security.
The root of the security problem is the exponential growth of new malware exploits, and the ever more sophisticated forms attacks can take. Your endpoint security solutions right now are most likely a hodgepodge of antivirus, anti-malware, and personal firewall products, but you know that they only protect you up to a point, and at a great cost in terms of time and effort.
BOUNCER by CoreTrace smashes the traditional antivirus blacklisting paradigm by using application whitelisting instead. What this means is that the BOUNCER client takes a snapshot of your clean endpoint, and then every time an application launches it's compared to the whitelist. If it's not on the list, it doesn't run. It doesn't matter if it's a user's favorite game or the incredibly sophisticated Trojan released out into the wild an hour ago — it just won’t run, thus providing the next-generation of endpoint security.
Breaking away from Endpoint Security 1.0 solutions in favor of BOUNCER also means you get to stop being ‘the patch guy’ — there's no emergency security patching or virus definition updating required to protect against new threats. You're free to update the applications you want to, on your schedule, without risk.
BOUNCER has a very small footprint on each endpoint, so you don't have to worry about slowing down systems. Typically, the BOUNCER client takes up less than 20 MB of disk space and uses less than 2 percent of CPU resources. Compare that to the lengthy, intensive task of comparing each application to a list of hundreds of thousands of known-bad exploits, and the benefits are obvious.