Complete Protection at the Edge Whitepaper
How effective protection at the edge can secure the most critical assets, mitigating threats closest to the point of attack.
The network perimeter is dissolving. An ever-increasing attack surface covers virtually every device in the world. Yet businesses must still be able to complete a digital transformation in order to respond quickly to new customer demands and market trends.
In this paper, you'll learn how effective protection at the edge can secure your most critical assets, mitigating threats closest to the point of attack.
Read More
By submitting this form you agree to Imperva contacting you with marketing-related emails or by telephone. You may unsubscribe at any time. Imperva web sites and communications are subject to their Privacy Notice.
By requesting this resource you agree to our terms of use. All data is protected by our Privacy Notice. If you have any further questions please email dataprotection@techpublishhub.com
Related Categories: Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, Business Intelligence (BI), Business Process Management, BYOD, Cloud Computing, Collaboration, Compliance, Consumerization of IT, Content Management Systems (CMS), Data Analytics, Data Center, Data Centers, Data management, Data Warehousing, Databases, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Finance & Finance Management, Firewall, Infrastructure Management, IT Management, Predictive Analytics, Project Management, SDDC, Server, Service Level Management, Service Management, Storage, Virtualization, Visual Analytics, VPN
More resources from Imperva
13 Questions You Must Ask Your Bot Mitigation...
Today, bots are a hot topic, one that affects all web applications. As a result, many vendors are trying to latch onto this trend by claiming to ha...
14 Questions to Ask Your Application Security...
When evaluating application security vendors, you have a great deal to consider. Understanding your goals will help. If your goal is vendor consoli...
The Anatomy of Account Takeover Attacks
Bad bots are on every website with a login page. Even yours. Hackers and fraudsters use bots to validate sets of login credentials, gain access to ...