Infinidat introduces cutting-edge cyber resiliency system

June 29, 2024
1 min read

TLDR:

  • Infinidat has launched an automated cyber resiliency system called InfiniSafe ACP to protect against ransomware and malware attacks.
  • The system integrates with security operations centers, SIEM, and SOAR software applications for quick and automated cyber recovery.

Infinidat has introduced a new automated cyber resiliency and recovery system called InfiniSafe ACP. The system aims to revolutionize how companies can minimize the impact of ransomware and malware attacks by reducing the threat window of cyberattacks, including those driven by AI.

The InfiniSafe ACP system allows enterprises to easily integrate with their security operations centers, SIEM, SOAR software applications, and syslog functions for less complex environments. When a security incident is detected, the system triggers automated immutable snapshots of data, providing near instantaneous cyber recovery for InfiniBox and InfiniBox SSA block-based volumes and file systems.

Eric Herzog, CMO at Infinidat, highlights the need for proactive strategies and advanced automated technologies to combat cyber threats. The InfiniSafe ACP system has received praise from Chris Evans, principal analyst at Architecting IT, for its ability to take immediate snapshots of data at the first sign of a potential cyberattack, enhancing an enterprise’s overall cyber resilience.

Last month, Infinidat upgraded its InfiniBox arrays to fourth-generation hardware, offering improved performance, added cyber protection, Azure support, and a controller upgrade program.

Latest from Blog

Top 20 Linux Admin Tools for 2024

TLDR: Top Linux Admin Tools in 2024 Key points: Linux admin tools streamline system configurations, performance monitoring, and security management. Popular Linux admin tools include Webmin, Puppet, Zabbix, Nagios, and Ansible. Summary

Bogus job tempts aerospace, energy workers

TLDR: A North Korean cyberespionage group is posing as job recruiters to target employees in aerospace and energy sectors. Mandiant reports that the group uses fake job descriptions stored in malicious archives