Broadcast IT pros have far more on their plates that how to firewall and make email safe. Today's reliance on IT networking throughout the plant exposes nearly every broadcast operation to the possibility of security breaches. Author Leslie Ellis looks at how they are protecting their networks, assets and workflows from hackers.
Production workflows are changing as creative artists link together across multiple studios to ingest, transcode, edit, create graphics, sweeten audio and deliver video with the benefit of IP-based networking. But this new workflow demands valuable media assets and workflows remain secure.
An nScreenMedia report has found 28 percent of media organizations admit to experiencing a cyberattack. That's why many in the M&E industry are turning to Cisco for effective security solutions.
TVTechnology's Deborah McAdams discusses how broadcasters should approach the new age of virtualized video infrastructure with perspective from Cisco's CTO David Ward and Sandra Rivera, Vice President and General Manager of Intel Network Platforms Group.
Beyond content production, there's the need to ensure the security of every aspect of IP content distribution. The Cisco Security Architecture for Media protects the infrastructure, content and customer information of media distributors around the globe. Here's how.
The networking and security solutions for the XXXI Olympiad from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, included Cisco's Intrusion Prevention System (IPS) and robust network security with the Cisco Sourcefire and Lancope solutions.
The Cisco Next-Generation Intrusion Prevention System delivers deep insight into network devices, applications, users, operation systems and files. NGIPS combines this visibility with embedded security intelligence, automated analysis and threat effectiveness.
The Cisco ASA family of security devices is the result of more than 15 years of proven firewall and network security engineering and represents more than 1 million security applications deployed around the world.