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Read more:
Computerworld - Jan 26, 2006 |
| 'The integration is tight - they're obviously sharing code and talking with each other' said Patrick Guerin, senior security analyst at Key Management Systems, a Colorado Springs-based security solution provider. |
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Read more:
Unstrung - Dec 5, 2005 |
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| 'Newbury Networks offers a unique capability within the market today as they can detect wireless access security breaches based on the location of these breaches,' said Bill Erdman, Director of Business Development, Wireless Networking Business Unit, Cisco Systems. |
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Read more:
Computer Reseller News - Dec 5, 2005
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| Wi-Fi Watchdog Early Warning System (EWS) tracks all traffic on the wireless network and can identify and isolate threats such as rogue access points |
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Read more:
Wireless IQ - Dec 5, 2005 |
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| Newbury Networks Inc. today introduced a new edition of its award- winning WiFi Watchdog wireless security solution - WiFi Watchdog/EWS. |
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Read more:
Wireless Week - Dec 5, 2005 |
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| WiFi Watchdog/EWS identifies and isolates rogue clients and unauthorized APs and pinpoints their physical location for immediate removal. |
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Read more:
CIO Today- Nov 11, 2005 |
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| Newbury Networks uses location-based technology to detect wireless rogue access points and restrict unauthorized access to enterprise WLANs. |
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Read more:
InformationWeek - Aug 1, 2005 |
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| Newbury Networks are using innovative techniques - such as applying locating technology to detect unauthorized access - to provide an extra layer of protection on top of existing network infrastructures. |
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Read more:
Channel 7, Boston - Jul 29, 2005
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| You may not know what an intruder is doing -- but he sure knows what you're doing. When you're connected to a wireless router, a nearby attacker can grab your information right out of the air. |
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Read more:
eWEEK - Jun 28, 2005 |
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| WiFi Watchdog 5.0 is server-side software that uses location technology for intrusion prevention and detection, client protection, and rogue access point containment. |
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Read more:
Information Week - Jun 27, 2005 |
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| Noting that security is becoming an urgent necessity as wireless networks proliferate throughout enterprises, Newbury Networks is addressing the need with its Wi-Fi Watchdog 5.0, which can precisely locate -- and block -- unauthorized users trying to enter networks. |
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Read more:
Unstrung - Jun 27, 2005 |
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| 'WiFi Watchdog's enhanced intrusion detection features, on top of its robust location-based perimeter security capabilities, provide for a comprehensive intrusion prevention system that allows federal agencies and commercial enterprises to satisfy mandated wireless security requirements and document due diligence' said Patrick Guerin, Senior Security Analyst, Key Management Systems. |
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Read more:
Wi-Fi Planet - Jun 27, 2005 |
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| Newbury Networks has a new watchdog - WiFi Watchdog 5.0. This version will include a graphical alert viewer, featuring a view with layers for the floor plan, the devices on the network, and where problems like rogues or devices with spoofed MAC addresses are found. |
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Read more:
Computerworld - Jun 20, 2005 |
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| ...is more than just a weak punch line to a stale real estate joke. It's the critical element missing from most wireless security tools, says Brian Wangerien, director of product management at Boston-based Newbury Networks Inc. |
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Read more:
TechWeb - May 23, 2005 |
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| 'Many organizations rely on VPNs to secure traffic over their wireless networks. But, this latest vulnerability is yet another example of how VPNs are not sufficient to protect networks from wireless attacks' warned Matthew Gray, Newbury's founder and chief technology officer. |
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Read more:
Mass HiTech - May 2, 2005 |
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| Newbury Networks Inc. in Boston and Science Application International Corp. (SAIC) in San Diego. will collaborate on products designed to help provide security in government and commercial applications. |
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Read more:
The Boston Globe - Apr 24, 2005 |
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| Wi-Fi "should fundamentally change the way you work and the way you think," says Michael Maggio, CEO of Newbury Networks. |
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Read more:
Government Security News - Mar 21, 2005 |
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| Washington may be the center of homeland security policy and decision-making, but Newbury Networks uncovers some federal agencies and private firms in the nation's capital are not doing a good job of securing their networks. |
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Read more:
Networking Magazine - Mar 2005 |
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| Using location-aware presence, Newbury Networks' CTO Matthew Gray thinks he can improve Wi-Fi security in a number of ways. |
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Read more:
Datamation - Feb 8, 2005 |
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| Datamation's Product of the Year 2005 Awards showcase the diversity of enterprise technology and recognize the rapidly evolving needs of enterprise professionals. |
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Read more:
Network World - Jan 21, 2005 |
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| Network World selects Newbury Networks as Best of the Tests finalist for "scoring highest in product tests and for rocking the networked world," said Keith Shaw, senior editor, product testing. |
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Read more:
ZD Net - Nov 5, 2004 |
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| WiFi Watchdog 4.0 is designed to stop unsecured wireless LAN usage across the enterprise. It works with standard WLAN deployments, such as Cisco network infrastructures, to detect, monitor, and secure the location of all 802.11 traffic. |
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Read more:
Wi-Fi Planet - Nov 2 2004 |
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| The latest version of WiFi Watchdog from Boston's Newbury Networks acts as a border patrol for your enterprise's WLAN. The new software scans Wi-Fi networks for intruder signatures, while arming IT administrators with flexible ways to respond. |
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Read more:
Network World Fusion - Nov 1 2004 |
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| New software from two vendors is intended to boost security for wireless LANs, one targeting the network, the other wireless clients. |
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Read more:
ComputerWorld - Sept 2 2004 |
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| While physical security was tightened to unprecedented levels -- transforming the city into something unrecognizable to those who call it home -- IT security researchers uncovered an unsettling number of unencrypted wireless devices that they say create a potential information security nightmare for convention organizers and delegates. |
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Read more:
TechWeb - Sept 2 2004 |
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| Republicans and Democrats may hold to different ideologies, but they're pretty much the same -- lame -- when it comes to locking down wireless networks. |
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Read more:
Mass High Tech - Aug 23 2004 |
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| Even if your organization has not formally adopted 802.11 technologies, it is likely that your employees, neighbors, business partners and vendors have already deployed wi-fi and more than likely put your information security in jeopardy... |
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Read more:
Government Security News - July 2004 |
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| The U.S. Air Force has decided to install an innovative security system, known as 'WiFi Watchdog' at Hanscom and Westover Air Force Bases in Massachusetts - and four other bases across the country (page 40) |
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Read more:
The Boston Globe - July 22, 2004 |
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| The Democratic convention will use a standard wired network rather than WiFi. But according to Maggio, this won't provide any extra security. That's because many visitors who'll plug into the network will have computers with built-in WiFi capability... |
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Read more:
CMP TechWeb - July 23, 2004 |
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| In a pair of day-long drives around the FleetCenter in July, Newbury easily found thousands of unsecured access points in Boston and hundreds in the immediate area of the FleetCenter, said the company's chief technology officer, Matthew Gray. |
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Read more:
SearchSecurity - July 26, 2004. |
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| There's a gaping hole in the much-hyped security measures taken for this week's Democratic National Convention: Thousands of wireless devices around the FleetCenter could be used as pawns in a cyberattack. |
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Read more:
New York Times - June 10, 2004. |
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| Newbury Networks has developed hand-held guides for a modern art exhibition at the Royal Sonesta Hotel in Boston and for the Renwick Gallery at the Smithsonian... |
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Read more:
Mobile Pipeline News - June 7, 2004. |
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| The system uses location-based technology to either provide access or prevent it depending on where the wireless user is in the facility, the company said. That would enable access, say, in meeting rooms but not from the parking lot or in sensitive areas within the WLAN coverage area. |
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Read more:
Wi-Fi Planet - June 7, 2004. |
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| The new product is called Wi-Fi Workplace and while it will have all the security functions of Watchdog, the product also brings the company into the world of enterprise wireless LAN management. |
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Read more:
Computer World - June 7, 2004. |
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| . . that strangers can get network access while whiny executives can't. That's when you might consider evaluating WiFi Workplace, wireless network management software from Newbury Networks Inc. in Boston. The technical trick, according to CEO Michael Maggio, 'is to be able to look at the air' like traditional network management tools can look at a wire. |
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Read more:
Network World Fusion - June 7, 2004. |
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| Newbury builds on its current location-based security product to create a new product, called WiFi Workplace, for administering wireless LANs (WLAN). |
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Read more:
Boston Business Journal - June 4, 2004. |
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| Given its location, Newbury Networks might be something of a national treasure -- while most Wi-Fi startups nationally have headquarters in office parks such as those found on Route 128 and Interstate 495, Newbury Networks is in the shadow of Boston's Prudential Tower, and so has the pulse of the security for corporate Wi-Fi networks in the area. |
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Read more
Channel WEB - April 2, 2004. |
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| Newbury Networks this week plans to launch a new partner program, along with a new internal channel sales team. |
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Read more:
Network World Fusion - March 15, 2004. |
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| One of the biggest Wi-Fi security fears for network professionals is the ''van in the parking lot'' scenario, in which an intruder breaks into the network from outside the company's walls. Newbury Networks tackles this problem with WiFi Watchdog. |
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Read more:
Washington Technology - February 24, 2004. |
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| Newbury's courting of Northrop Grumman is increasingly typical of the way large integrators and smaller, specialized cybersecurity companies meet and form partnerships. |
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Read more:
Tech Republic - February 10, 2004. |
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| Wi-Fi security tools and sound fundamental practices can help safeguard your wireless transmissions from a growing band of hi-tech thieves known as war drivers. |
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Read more:
Mercury News - February 9, 2004. |
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| And through a partnership with Boston-based Newbury Networks, Dartmouth is pushing different information to people depending on where they are in the room. |
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Read more:
Wifi-Planet - December 4, 2003. |
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| Newbury Network's Wi-Fi Watchdog 3.0 -- Being an expert in location-based services wasn't enough for Newbury Networks. Putting such services to work in the world of security has been the company's turning point. This latest version of their software, premiering here at the show, packs a one-two punch by not only being position aware but also pushing policies based on locations. |
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Read more:
Mass High Tech - December 1, 2003. |
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| Boston-based Newbury Networks Inc. rolled out a new security system this week for wi-fi networks that can track users' physical location and block specific people from accessing the network depending on where they are in a building. |
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Read more:
Computerworld - July 14, 2003. |
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| WLAN adoption presents serious security challenges for today's enterprise IT professionals. But by using LENs, organizations can help protect themselves against unauthorized access to networks.... |
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Read more:
Boston Globe - June 23, 2003. |
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| Newbury is unveiling a system called WiFi Watchdog that allows network administrators to see who is on their wireless network, and where exactly they are... |
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Read more:
Directions - April 25, 2003. |
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| Dartmouth may be only touching the tip of the iceberg where LBS applications are concerned... |
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Read more:
University Business - April, 2003. |
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| If products like LocaleServer enable colleges and universities to filter information to users based upon their location on campus, who's to say they wouldn't be able to pinpoint the location of a student in distress? |
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Read more:
NewsFactor Network - March 3, 2003. |
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| Newbury Networks aims to deliver ferocious Watchdog functionality with its suite of wireless LAN security products that advance the concept of location-enabled network technology. |
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Read more:
Wireless Review - December 2002. |
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| WiFi is the unstoppable force letting you go damn near anywhere. Corporate America is the immovable object keeping workers on a short leash. Newbury Networks is the company bringing them together |
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Read more:
CNET News.com - December 3, 2002. |
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| Start-up Newbury Networks announced a new application it says will help IT managers keep wireless networks secure. |
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Read more:
Business 2.0 - December, 2002. |
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| What's going to make wireless network applications really take off? Location, location, location. |
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Read more:
ISP Planet - December 5, 2002. |
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| Location Enabled Network solution provider Newbury Networks says its WiFi Watchdog add-on not only tells administrators about intruders, it will tells where they are. |
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Read more:
GEEK.com - December 5, 2002. |
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| WiFi that tells you where intruders are. |
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Read more:
Information Week - December 4, 2002. |
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| Newbury Networks' upcoming offering will alert administrators to unauthorized administrators. |
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