NextLabs, a developer of policy-driven, information risk management software, has introduced Enterprise DLP 4.5, the latest release of their identity-aware data protection product, used by enterprises to discover, monitor, protect, and manage sensitive data.
The company claimed that Enterprise DLP is the integrated identity-aware product on the market to use identity, user context, and content detection together to identify, discover, detect, and protect data at risk. Identity-aware DLP can enforce policy based on the user roles, partner relationships, and the data being accessed, used, or shared.
Enterprise DLP reportedly brings together Data Loss Prevention, Application and Device Control, Unified Communications Control, and Information Rights Management applications, centrally managed by one policy system. This integrated product is said to allow companies to address data protection use cases and eliminate multiple security technology silos along with their associated integration and management costs.
The new offering adds features that include: extend policy enforcement across more network protocols including FTP, SFTP, FTPS, SMTP, HTTP, HTTPS, BitTorrent, Gnutella, IMAP, Jabber, rsync, WebDav, NFS, SMB, CIFS, and more; and add Information Rights Management functionality that controls screen capture, offline access lease, and document watermarking. The product already supports standard rights such as access control, printing, clipboard operations, and metadata cleansing.
Andy Han, VP and general manager of NextLabs, said: “Enterprise DLP 4.5 is the result of our close collaboration with leaders from Aerospace and Defense, Manufacturing, and High Technology industries working to mitigate information risk associated with compliance and intellectual property protection. These companies require solutions that work in their highly collaborative, mobile, and distributed work environments, and are investing in technology based on standards like XACML that can integrate with existing systems and interoperate in the future.”