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SDN Could Anchor Security for IoT, Federal Network Modernization

Government conversations related to safeguarding cyberspace spin around policy as much as technology, particularly when it comes to sluggish efforts to modernize networks. Federal information assurance security policies and procedures were penned long before today's threats rendered them obsolete. The New IP approach to modernize networks could help change that.

Government conversations related to safeguarding cyberspace spin around policy as much as technology, particularly when it comes to sluggish efforts to modernize networks.

Federal information assurance security policies and standard operating procedures (SOPs) were penned in the late 1990s and early 2000s, long before today’s threats rendered them obsolete, not to speak of the challenges posed by the emerging Internet of Things (IoT) influence.

“Based on the evolution of connected devices, the security SOPs need to adjust along with the technologies and evolutions that we’re talking about,” says Judson Walker, systems engineering director at Brocade Federal, which for at least five years has called for a governmentwide network modernization effort, particularly within the Defense Department.

“The network that serves the warfighter of tomorrow will be multi-vendor, open standard, simplified, software-enabled and potentially acquired as a service,” says Anthony Robbins, vice president of federal sales at Brocade. “That’s not a statement about Cisco, Juniper, Brocade, HP or Dell. That’s a statement about what the network should look like. As the government moves in that direction, there will be plenty of opportunities for Brocade and Juniper and Cisco to compete to serve them.”

Layered security for defense-in-depth is enhanced significantly with the “New IP,” the architecture sweeping the public-private partnership toward network modernization that will also address security concerns posed by the IoT and government data migration to the cloud.

Bolstering its resolve to galvanize the New IP approach, Brocade announced Monday its plans to buy Ruckus Wireless, an investment that expands Brocade’s Wi-Fi offerings to address the increasing insecurities introduced by the IoT. “The network infrastructure is about wired and wireless and we bought one of the leading providers of wireless connectivity,” Robbins offered. “We just strengthened our position relative to wired and wireless infrastructure providers for network modernization.”

The closed-source infrastructure that powers government networks has not had an overhaul modernization in at least two decades, a limitation that means the government is losing out on $7 billion a year, over the next five years, in savings, Robbins says.

In addition to thought leadership and compelling ideas for the path forward relative to network modernization—the subject for the 2016 Federal Forum on June 14 in Washington, D.C.—solutions must address the sheer number of connected devices elevating the cyberspace security conversation. In 1995, commercially, there were about 100 million devices connected to networks. “Twenty years later, we are now north of 7 billion,” Walker says. “By 2020, we’re looking at numbers around 20 billion. You’ve now provided attack vectors for people to compromise government networks on a scale we haven’t seen before.” 

The software-defined networking (SDN) prong of the modernization effort promises to provide a security strategy from the device to the data center, including integrated solutions into a unified end-to-end strategy to protect IoT data, he said. Software tools provide automation to various security products, from firewalls to deep packet inspection tools, and cyber offensive and defensive measures. “With the software-defined overlay on top, I have a set of tools that can bring all of those individual point products together to build that true end-to-end strategy from the device to the data center, where the information resides,” Walker shares.

“That’s the nirvana we’re trying to get to from a security in cyberspace perspective.”

The Defense Department increasingly relies on industry in its search for commercial best practices in this field, from the usual cast of defense characters to the newly formed Defense Innovation Unit Experimental (DIUx), in California’s Silicon Valley, created to link non-traditional companies operating at the bleeding edge with the Defense Department.

“With the new IP and modernization effort, from a securing the cyberspace perspective, is that the solution is to provide performance as well as security in a cooperative effort,” Walker says. “We can have our cake and eat it too.”

Comment

A new report published by Allied Market Research titled, “World Situation Awareness Systems (SAS) - Market Opportunities and Forecasts, 2015-2022”, forecast that the world situation awareness systems (SAS) market is projected to garner $32.6 billion by 2022, registering a CAGR of 8.2% during the forecast period (2016 – 2022). North America dominates the world SAS market, owing to the huge demand for situation awareness systems in the United States.

Based on product type, the global SAS market is segmented into command & control system; fire & flood alarm systems; radio frequency identification (RFID); radar; chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) systems; sonar; physical security information management (PSIM)/ access control (including HMI); and others. Command & control system accounted for the maximum revenue share in 2015, constituting around 31% of the total market revenue. In terms of growth, the radio frequency identification (RFID) segment is estimated to register the fastest CAGR of 9.7% during the forecast period. Based on verticals, the market is segmented into military & defense, healthcare, aerospace, marine security, automotive, mining and oil & gas, industrial, cyber security, and others. Military & defense segment dominated the market in 2015, accounting for 31.6% share of the overall market in terms of revenue.

The key components of situation awareness systems include network video recorders (NVR), sensors, global positioning system (GPS), displays, and others. Presently, displays segment drives the world situation awareness systems market by component, accounting for 44.4% share of the overall market in 2015. Displays offer visual representation of the data captured from devices such as network video recorders and surveillance cameras and find widespread applications in numerous industries. Furthermore, the world SAS market is analyzed based on geography into North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and LAMEA. North America dominated the world situation awareness systems market, accounting for 42% share of the overall market revenue in 2015. This region is expected to continue its dominance during the forecast period. From a growth perspective, Asia-Pacific is anticipated to witness the highest growth among all the regions. The SAS market in Asia-Pacific is projected to grow at a CAGR of 9.9% during the forecast period, owing to the presence of several key SAS providers and increasing demand for security and surveillance in countries such as India, China, and Japan.

KEY FINDINGS OF THE STUDY

By industry vertical, military & defense dominated the world situation awareness system market in 2015
Among the product types, RFID has the highest growth potential and is expected to grow at the fastest CAGR during the forecast period, owing to its increased application across industries such as automotive, marine security and healthcare
North America would be the dominant geography in the situation awareness systems (SAS) market throughout the forecast period (2016-2022), owing to the widespread adoption of SAS solutions across different industries for improved security
The report also outlines the competitive scenario of the world situation awareness systems (SAS) market, providing a comprehensive study of the key strategies adopted by companies operating in the SAS market. Key companies profiled in the report include Honeywell International Inc., Rockwell Collins, Inc., BAE Systems, Inc., Microsoft Corporation, Denso Corporation, D3 Security Management Systems, Inc., Lockheed Martin Corporation, Harris Corporation, and others.

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