FireEye Hits The Road To Elevate Market Awareness Of Anti-Botnet Protection

 

Company Aims to Protect Customers from Botnet-Generated Data Compromise, Corporate Intellectual Property Theft, and Identity Fraud by Training Security Professionals at Key Government, Education and Industry Events

 

MENLO PARK, Calif.—October 15, 2007—FireEye, Inc., the leader in global anti-botnet protection, continues its strategic momentum in the war against botnet-driven cybercrime with industry speaking engagements geared to educate government, education, and technology audiences about the approaches available to counter the threats and damages incurred through the current botnet pandemic. Experts estimate approximately 150 million bot-infected computers worldwide are used for nefarious botnet activities, yet there has not been a coordinated security response, nor an avenue for such a response, from victims of botnet infiltrations. Through a series of upcoming industry events, FireEye seeks to bring greater understanding of botnets to IT and security professionals, informing and strengthening their anti-botnet protection initiatives.

FireEye opens the Cyber Security Summit, co-hosted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), University of Tennessee, Fountainhead College of Technology and the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), with a presentation on virtualization and its role in securing the network. On October 16, Dr. Michael J. Staggs, chief investigator at FireEye, will speak on the topic, "Beyond Data Center Consolidation: Realizing Virtualization's Network Security Capabilities." Additionally, early Internet architect and technologist, Johnson Agogbua will be speaking at Technology Managers Forum's Security Forum 2007, which features Emerging Trends in Enterprise Security on October 18 in New York. Agogbua is an external advocate and evangelist of FireEye's technical approach and vision for protecting all customers from botnet threats. He is a member of the United States FCC Technological Advisory Council and Network World magazine named Agogbua as one of the 50 "On Power's Edge."

Today, bot herders hijack millions of PCs and link them together into a criminal network perpetrating a wide range of illegal activities. Enterprise, consumer, and government computers are now unwitting perpetrators, accomplices, and victims in the estimated $67 billion computer-based crime wave hitting the Internet. Security measures must take into account the tools and tactics of criminal syndicates in order to be effective. By providing a deep understanding of bot herder criminality and the underlying botnet infrastructure, FireEye equips IT security and law enforcement professionals with the knowledge and tools to eliminate bots from their network, protect their critical business infrastructure, and prevent data compromises from taking place. FireEye is sharing critical knowledge about the entire cybercrime cycle - from the techniques employed to 'recruit' bot machines to the ultimate use of botnets for extortion, espionage, and even cybeterrorism.

"Education leads to understanding but the demand for education is created by the awareness of a problem," said Dr. Michael J. Staggs, chief investigator at FireEye, Inc. "Clearly, the industry is aware of the botnet threat as evidenced by the stream of invitations for FireEye to speak to various IT security and law enforcement audiences. We are honored to play a key role in helping them protect against botnets."

Dr. Staggs' presentation this week at the Cyber Security Summit will discuss how analysis of virtual victim (host) machines can identify, thwart, and prevent future network-based attacks from botnets and zero-day malware as well as enable an automated security response to the near-infinite variants of botnet malware. FireEye's presentation takes place at 9:00 a.m. on October 16 at the Carolyn P. Brown Memorial University Center on the campus of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, Tenn. More information can be found at http://cybersecurity.utk.edu/index.htm.

Dr. Staggs is also conducting a three-day Botnet Forensics course as part of the State of Colorado's InfraGard Membership Training beginning October 30. InfraGard is an FBI program that facilitates support between the information technology industry and academia and the FBI's investigative efforts in the cybercrime arena. In September, Dr. Staggs shared anti-botnet techniques and practices with state and local government IT leaders attending the Colorado Digital Government Summit & Cyber Security Summit during his talk, "Botnets Ð Current State of the Net." He also addressed students, faculty, government officials and industry professionals at Colorado State University's FutureVisions Symposium discussing, "Botnets - Zombies, Masters, Victim by the Horde."

"FireEye's efforts in anti-botnet protection education are tremendously valuable to our employees and constituents," said Mark Weatherford, chief information security officer, State of Colorado. "I'd like to personally commend FireEye for its outreach and commitment to alleviating the pervasive botnet problem. The potential damages caused by botnets extend far beyond direct organizational resource and revenue losses, which in and of themselves are staggering."

As part of Technology Managers Forum's Security Forum 2007, Johnson Agogbua will be speaking on a panel entitled, "Corporate Challenge: IT Security Priorities - What's Hot and What's Not" at 9:30 a.m., October 18, in Bridgewaters, 11 Fulton Street at the South Street Seaport, New York. Agogbua is a leading Internet pioneer and entrepreneur as well as anti-botnet evangelist for FireEye. He has co-founded several technology companies including Movaz Networks, Broadband Office, and Zephion Networks as well as heading up Global Network Engineering and Architecture at UUNET Technologies where he was in charge of the world's largest network. For more information about the event please visit http://www.techforum.com/sf2007_2/index.html.

About the FireEye Botwall Solution

The FireEye Botwall™ security appliances and FireEye Botwall Network service together provide comprehensive anti-botnet protection. FireEye Botwall appliances analyze enterprise networks for bot activities and compromised machines. The FireEye Botwall Network is a globally deployed botnet discovery and analysis service which provides subscribers with the most current botnet intelligence to complement on-premise anti-botnet security appliances. It catalogs and disseminates botnet characteristics derived from malware analyses which are conducted by interconnected networks of FireEye Botwall security appliances selectively deployed at service providers around the world. FireEye's solution offers the industry's first complete global and local anti-botnet protection to precisely identify, understand, and stop emerging botnet and malware threats.

About FireEye, Inc.

FireEye, Inc. is the leader in anti-botnet protection, enabling organizations to protect critical intellectual property, computing resources, and network infrastructure against bot infiltration. Today's most damaging attacks originate from and through highly organized botnets, or networks of remotely controlled, compromised machines. FireEye delivers a complete solution that is designed from the ground up to detect and protect organizations from botnets through global and local intelligence and analysis. The company is backed by Sequoia Capital, Norwest Venture Partners, and JAFCO. For more information, contact (408) 321-6300 or email: .

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  • Phillip Lin
    FireEye, Inc.
    408.321.6300

     

    Arlene Lim
    Loughlin/Michaels Group
    408.910.3112

     

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