Former Google Employees Launch Web Malware Startup
The company will address changing malware distribution patterns and to provide a way to respond to Web security threats using automated techniques.
(click image for larger view)
from left to right: Ameet Ranadive, Neil Daswani, Shariq Rizvi
Dasient, a Web security startup founded by engineers and product managers from Google and McKinsey, on Tuesday plans to begin open beta testing of its new Web Anti-Malware (WAM) service.
More Internet Insights
Webcasts
- Engaging Online Financial Services Customers– Best practices in implementing online chat
- The State of Community Management in Social Business
White Papers
More >>Reports
More >>Neil Daswani, co-founder of the company, used to work as a Web security engineer and product manager at Google. He started Dasient with Ameet Ranadive from McKinsey and Shariq Rizvi from Google to address changing malware distribution patterns and to provide a way to respond to Web threats using automated mitigation techniques.
Legitimate Web sites have become unwitting malware distribution points, thanks to poor Web application security. During the second half of 2008, 77% of Web sites spreading malicious code were legitimate sites that had been hacked, according to Websense Security Labs.
According to Daswani, malware authors will scan for vulnerable versions of a particular Web application and then run automated scripts to infect every vulnerable application identified.
This not only makes dealing with the problem difficult because so many Web sites are affected, but it also raises the possibility of being blacklisted by search engines, browser makers, and/or security companies.
And once a Web site is blacklisted, Web visitors arrive far less frequently or stop arriving altogether. Blacklisting essentially strangles ad revenue.
Web site owners have long complained about how difficult it can be to get off a blacklist. Dasient aims to prevent Web sites from ever being blacklisted or at least to keep the time spent on a blacklist to a minimum.
The company is offering a free blacklist monitoring service, to alert site owners when their sites have become infected, and a premium monitoring and diagnostic service for alerting site owners and supplying them with information about any malware found, to make remediation easier. Both the free and the premium service are now available as part of a public beta test.
The company is also offering an additional level of protection, a quarantine service that blocks malicious code on Web pages while still serving those pages to visitors. The quarantine service is still in private beta testing. Interested parties can sign up at the Dasient Web site.
Black Hat is like no other security conference. It happens in Las Vegas, July 25-30. Find out more and register.
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
Related Webcasts
- Engaging Online Financial Services Customers– Best practices in implementing online chat
- B2B Integration on the Cloud Webcast - Real World Solutions and Technology Advances
- Lessons from the Modern Contact Center
- The State of Community Management in Social Business
- Maximize the Effectiveness of Real-Time and Social Marketing Campaigns with IBM™ InfoSphere' Master Data Management
This Week's Issue
Free Print Subscription
SubscribeCurrent Government Issue
- Big Storage: Big data places heavy demands on storage infrastructure. Federal agencies must adapt their architectures and polices to optimize it all.
- Tape Storage Renaissance: Tape storage may be 60 years old, but it continues to survive and thrive.
- Read the Current Issue
Related Whitepapers
- Hidden Menace of Embedded Links
- Solution Brief: Customer Benefits of the New Blue Coat WebFilter Categories
- The IPv6 Future Is Now: Are You Ready?
- Moving Business Communication to the Cloud
- Turning Strategy and Innovation into Success - Driving revenue and profit growth for healthcare product portfolios
Featured Resource
"Read this whitepaper and find out how HP Thermal Logic represents a step forward in managing the energy consumption of today's data center. It plays a key role in the HP Data Center Smart Grid initiative to deliver an end-to-end portfolio of energy-efficient technologies reaching from the server to the entire datacenter. "
Learn More












