Exinda Networks today announced an enhancement to its WAN optimization appliances that helps control a broad range of recreational Internet traffic, such as instant messaging, gaming and downloading files for entertainment, that significantly slows business applications on corporate networks. Exinda's new feature detects and blocks or slows recreational Internet traffic, called encrypted peer-to-peer traffic, that cleverly slips past corporate firewalls, ensuring that business applications are not negatively impacted. Exinda is the only WAN optimization vendor that can detect, classify and control more than 1,000 applications which includes encrypted peer-to-peer traffic.
BOSTON (Business Wire EON) November 20, 2007 --
Exinda Networks today announced an
enhancement to its WAN optimization appliances that helps control a
broad range of recreational Internet traffic, such as instant messaging,
gaming and downloading files for entertainment, that significantly slows
business applications on corporate networks. Exinda’s
new feature detects and blocks or slows recreational Internet traffic,
called encrypted peer-to-peer traffic, that cleverly slips past
corporate firewalls, ensuring that business applications are not
negatively impacted. Exinda is the only WAN
optimization vendor that can detect, classify and control more than
1,000 applications which includes encrypted peer-to-peer traffic.
The ability to detect and control this traffic also saves companies
money and keeps employees more productive by not having to wait for
business applications to respond. According to a survey conducted by
America Online and Salary.com in June, 2005 employers spend $759 billion
per year on salaries for which real work was expected, but not actually
performed. Web surfing for recreational use was cited as the #1 time
waster at work by 44.7 percent of more than 10,000 people polled.
Skype, BitTorrent, MySpace and Facebook are among the most common Web
applications that send encrypted peer-to-peer network traffic over
corporate networks. Skype, a free software that is used for both
business and recreational purposes, offers instant messaging, file
transfer and video capabilities and is well known for its ability to
circumvent firewalls. BitTorrent is an application most commonly used
for social purposes to download large files including movies, TV shows,
games and MP3 audio files. MySpace and Facebook are social networking
applications for sharing photos, personal profiles, videos and more.
Recreational use of these applications are gaining in popularity,
negatively impacting business applications. Exinda’s
appliances can detect, classify and control 98 percent of BitTorrent
traffic whereas other WAN optimization vendors allow this traffic to
pass undetected or at best only detect and classify half of the rogue
traffic.
According to a survey conducted by Ashton, Metzler & Associates in
August, 2006, 63 percent of IT professionals see unauthorized use of
company networks for instant messaging and 58 percent see unauthorized
use for peer-to-peer file sharing. The statistics are likely much higher
given that these two types of traffic go highly undetected by most
firewalls.
“The recreational use of Skype and BitTorrent
has become a serious problem for companies and service providers,”
said Con
Nikolouzakis, chief executive officer of Exinda Networks. “These
recreational applications have a way of making business application run
as if they were in slow motion. They have been known to crash the
network in some instances. It’s disruptive to
employees and adds unnecessary expense to operate the corporate network.”
Nikolouzakis added, “There are situations
where encrypted peer-to-peer traffic is used for legitimate business
purposes such as conference calls being hosted on Skype. In those
instances, it is important to be able to detect and prioritize this
traffic rather than restrict it. Until now, WAN optimization vendors
have fallen short on properly handling encrypted peer-to-peer traffic.”
Skype and BitTorrent traffic were designed to use different network
ports and file server IP addresses making it very difficult for
firewalls to detect it. Exinda’s new feature
classifies Skype and BitTorrent traffic using Layer 7 heuristics to
detect traffic patterns and apply the proper network policy to control
it.
Additionally, Exinda’s new heuristics-based
classification speeds data at up to 100 times faster than before. Faster
classification is helpful in large service provider and enterprise
networks handling large amounts of data and numerous applications.
Availability and Pricing
Exinda’s new classification engine will be
available on December 3, 2007 as part of a firmware update at no charge
to Exinda customers who have a current software subscription. Visit www.exinda.com/support/
for more details.
About Exinda Networks
Exinda Networks is a global supplier of Unified Performance Management
that integrates WAN optimization, application acceleration, application
visibility and application response time measurements for enterprise,
government and service provider clients. Founded in 2002, Exinda's
mission is to ensure optimal and consistent application performance over
the WAN and reduce network operating costs. Exinda has more than 1,000
customers in more than 35 countries around the world. Exinda's award
winning technology is available by contacting leading resellers or
Exinda directly.
Research and development offices are located in Melbourne, Australia.
Exinda's U.S. headquarters is located in Boston, Massachusetts.
Additional corporate offices are located in Dubai, Frankfurt, London and
Kuala Lumpur. For more information, visit www.exinda.com.
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