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Posts Tagged ‘Blue Coat’

Website Categorization – Assessing Productivity

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Security and Threat Management solutions, such as Microsoft Forefront TMG, IronPort and Blue Coat, use predefined URL categorization to simplify blocking and filtering management. Different security vendors have different ways of categorizing websites but it generally involves referring to a gigantic, regularly updated database of millions of websites sorted into 50-100 relevant categories.

Majority of security vendors will give you a high level overview of the categories, such as Sports, Shopping, Online Community, Streaming Media, Employment and Gambling, but rarely provides intuitive ways to further investigate the traffic going to the sites within these categories. The nifty thing about WebSpy’s solutions is that, as long as categories are logged, you can use WebSpy to analyze web browsing in relation to these categories and get a much clearer overview of your organization’s web usage.

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3 Simple Reasons Why Resellers Want WebSpy

Friday, April 16th, 2010

To set things straight from the get-go, this is not a plug about our partner program, margin structure or reseller support. All the ingredients necessary to bake a successful partner cake are present (and being improved…get ready for some exciting partner announcement in the coming weeks). No, this is simply a very factual overview of the Network and Security Industry, where majority of security vendors fall short and where WebSpy continues to save our resellers’ day.

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Universal Log File Analyzer

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

WebSpy analyze and report on different types of log files, from different types of network and security devices (such as web servers, web proxy servers, email server, event logs, firewalls, switches, routers, and spam and virus application), taking raw data and converting it into meaningful and actionable information.

We take great pride in this versatility and the fact that our software is virtually vendor neutral, or universal. At the time of writing our software support 128 different vendors, and more than 250 log file formats. But what does all this actually mean? What’s all this log file format gibberish and why is better to use a universal log file analyzer than a reporting solution that can only analyze a limited set of log files?

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