Podcasts about backup exec

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Best podcasts about backup exec

Latest podcast episodes about backup exec

The Holtz Story
Data's Role in Ransomware with Simon Jelley of Veritas

The Holtz Story

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 30:03


 This week, Simon Jelley, Vice President of Product for Backup Exec, Endpoint Protection, and SaaS Backup at Veritas, joins "The Holtz Story" to discuss data's role in ransomware. Simon starts us out by discussing how ransomware has evolved to become more enterprise targeted. Protecting data in-flight with encryption, multi-factor authentication, etc., continues to be critical, and now customers are learning they must also protect their backups. Simon introduces his 3, 2, 1 rule to protect data: Keep 3 versions of backups2 of which are nearline accessible, and one off the networkRehearse recovery Simon and Tracy step back and discuss how the attack surface has evolved and its impact on Veritas products.  Veritas has doubled down on secondary data copies being a potential attack surface, recognizing ransomware as a threat, and building resiliency into their solutions. Veritas has also focused on supporting new types of workloads, specifically Cloud SaaS. The rapid shift towards work-from-home and multi-cloud added complexity and changed the customer's and Veritas' focus. Customers assumed backup and recovery was built into cloud SaaS solutions and have learned they need to take more responsibility for their data. Customers are also learning there are new compliance and privacy considerations to manage.Looking forward, Simon discusses how Veritas ensures customers can evolve with no impediment, building ransomware resiliency using AI and ML to spot threat patterns and introducing privacy protection into backups.We hope you enjoy the show. If you do, please share it with colleagues and remember to subscribe using your favorite podcast platform (I.e., iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, Google Play, etc.).

ScanNetSecurity 最新セキュリティ情報
Veritas 製 Veritas Backup Exec に権限昇格の脆弱性

ScanNetSecurity 最新セキュリティ情報

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2020


独立行政法人情報処理推進機構(IPA)および一般社団法人JPCERT コーディネーションセンター(JPCERT/CC)は12月24日、Veritas 製 Veritas Backup Exec の権限昇格の脆弱性について「Japan Vulnerability Notes(JVN)」で発表した。影響を受けるシステムは以下の通り。

ipa veritas backup exec
Arrow Bandwidth
Protecting Your Data Is About Being Right–A Post-Arrow Technology Summit Chat

Arrow Bandwidth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2019 10:32


Data management and protecting your data isn't about "stuff" – it's about being right. Point products still haven’t solved the ongoing evolution of threats. The reality is that your most valuable asset—your data—is still at risk. In this podcast recorded at Arrow Technology Summit 2019, Davitt Potter and guest Simon Jelley sit down to re-cap everything discussed on the main stage during the “Protecting Your Data Is About Being Right" session. SPEAKERS: Davitt Potter Global Practice Leader, Arrow Davitt Potter's early real-world education began at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, where he was a field engineer, systems architect and security/infrastructure consultant. Potter joined Arrow in 2010 and currently leads the two of our global practice areas, assisting with global go-to-market strategies, emerging technology incubation, CTO/CISO consulting, and helping customers and their end-users with IT strategy planning and management. Simon Jelley VP of Product for Backup Exec, Endpoint Protection and SaaS Backup, Veritas Simon Jelley has over 20 years of experience in data protection and information management. Having originally joined through the KVS acquisition, Jelley has led teams within Veritas' Enterprise & SMB-focused Backup & Archiving solutions over the years. With Veritas’ mission to help organizations "find the truth in their information," Jelley is currently driving the Backup Exec, Endpoint Protection and SaaS backup solutions as GM & VP of Product.

The History of Computing
The History of Symantec

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2019 12:09


Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us for the innovations of the future! Todays episode is on the History of Symantec. This is really more part one of a part two series. Broadcom announced they were acquiring Symantec in August of 2019, the day before we recorded this episode. Who is this Symantec and what do they do - and why does Broadcom want to buy them for 10.7 Billion dollars? For starters, by themselves Symantec is a Fortune 500 company with over $4 billion dollars in annual revenues so $10.7 Billion is a steal for an enterprise software company. Except they're just selling the Enterprise software division and keeping Norton in the family. With just shy of 12,000 employees, Symantec has twisted and turned and bought and sold companies for a long time. But how did they become a Fortune 500 company? It all started with Eisenhower. ARPA or the Advanced Research Projects Agency, which would later add the word Defense to their name, become DARPA and build a series of tubes call the interweb. While originally commissioned so Ike could counter Sputnik, ARPA continued working to fund projects in computers and in the 1970s, this kid out of the University of Texas named Gary Hendrix saw that they were funding natural language understanding projects. This went back to Turing and DARPA wanted to give some AI-complete a leap forward, trying to make computers as intelligent as people. This was obviously before Terminator told us that was a bad idea (pro-tip, it's a good idea). Our intrepid hero Gary saw that sweet, sweet grant money and got his PhD from the UT Austin Computational Linguistics Lab. He wrote some papers on robotics and the Stanford Research Institute, or SRI for short. Yes, that's the same SRI that invented the hosts.txt file and is responsible for keeping DNS for the first decade or so of the internet. So our pal Hendrix joins SRI and chases that grant money, leaving SRI in 1980 with about 15 other Stanford researchers to start a company they called Machine Intelligence Corporation. That went bust and so he started Symantec Corporation in 1982 got a grant from the National Science foundation to build natural language processing software; it turns out syntax and semantics make for a pretty good mashup. So the new company Symantec built out a database and some advanced natural language code, but by 1984 the PC revolution was on and that code had been built for a DEC PDP so could not be run on the emerging PCs in the industry. Symantec was then acquired by C&E Software short for the names of its founders, Dennis Coleman and Gordon Eubanks. The Symantec name stayed and Eubanks became the chairman of the board for the new company. C&E had been working on PC software called Q&A, which the new team finished and then added natural language processing to make using the tools easier to use. They called that “The Intelligent Assistant” and they now had a tool that would take them through the 80s. People swapped rolls, and due to a sharp focus on sales they did well. During the early days of the PC, dealers - or small computer stores that were popping up all over the country, were critical to selling hardware and software. Every Symantec employee would go on the road for six days a week, visiting 6 dealers a day. It was grueling but kept them growing and building. They became what we now call a “portfolio” company in 1985 when they introduced NoteIt, a natural language processing tool used to annotate docs in Lotus 1-2-3. Lotus was in the midst of eating the lunch of previous tools. They added another devision and made SQZ a Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet tool. This is important, they were a 3 product company with divisions when in 1987 they got even more aggressive and purchased Breakthrough Software who made an early project management tool called TimeLine. And this is when they did something unique for a PC software company: they split each product into groups that leveraged a shared pool of resources. Each product had a GM that was responsible for the P&L. The GM ran the development, Quality Assurance, Tech Support, and Product Market - those teams reported directly to the GM, who reported to then CEO Eubanks. But there was a shared sales, finance, and operations team. This laid the framework for massive growth, increased sales, and took Symantec to their IPO in 1989. Symantec purchased what was at the time the most popular CRM app called ACT! In 1993 Meanwhile, Peter Norton had a great suite of tools for working with DOS. Things that, well, maybe should have been built into operating systems (and mostly now are). Norton could compress files, do file recovery, etc. The cash Symantec raised allowed them to acquire The Peter Norton Company in 1999 which would completely change the face of the company. This gave them development tools for PC and Mac as Norton had been building those. This lead to the introduction of Symantec Antivirus for the Macintosh and called the anti-virus for PC Norton Antivirus because people already trusted that name. Within two years, with the added sales and marketing air cover that the Symantec sales machine provided, the Norton group was responsible for 82% of Symantecs total revenues. So much so that Symantec dropped building Q&A because Microsoft was winning in their market. I remember this moment pretty poignantly. Sure, there were other apps for the Mac like Virex, and other apps for Windows, like McAfee. But the Norton tools were the gold standard. At least until they later got bloated. The next decade was fast, from the outside looking in, except when Symantec acquired Veritas in 2004. This made sense as Symantec had become a solid player in the security space and before the cloud, backup seemed somewhat related. I'd used Backup Exec for a long time and watched Veritas products go from awesome to, well, not as awesome. John Thompson was the CEO through that decade and Symantec grew rapidly - purchasing systems management solution Altiris in 2007 and got a Data Loss Prevention solution that year in Vontu. Application Performance Management, or APM wasn't very security focused so that business until was picked up by Vector Capital in 2008. They also picked up MessageLabs and AppStream in 2008. Enrique Salem replaced Thompson and Symantec bought Versign's CA business in 2010. If you remember from our encryption episode, that was already spun off of RSA. Certificates are security-focused. Email encryption tool PGP and GuardianEdge were also picked up in 2010 providing key management tools for all those, um, keys the CA was issuing. These tools were never integrated properly though. They also picked up Rulespace in 2010 to get what's now their content filtering solution. Symantec acquired LiveOffice in 2012 to get enterprise vault and instant messaging security - continuing to solidify the line of security products. They also acquired Odyssey Software for SCCM plugins to get better at managing embedded, mobile, and rugged devices. Then came Nukona to get a MAM product, also in 2012. During this time, Steve Bennett was hired as CEO and fired in 2014. Then Michael Brown, although in the interim Veritas was demerged in 2014 and as their products started getting better they were sold to The Carlyle Group in 2016 for $8B. Then Greg Clark became CEO in 2016, when Symantec purchased Blue Coat. Greg Clark then orchestrated the LifeLock acquisition for $2.3B of that $8B. Thoma Bravo then bought CA business to merge with DigiCert in 2017. Then in 2019 Rick Hill became CEO. Does this seem like a lot of buying and selling? It is. But it also isn't. If you look at what Symantec has done, they have a lot of things they can sell customers for various needs in the information security space. At times, they've felt like a holding company. But ever since the Norton acquisition, they've had very specific moves that continue to solidify them as one of the top security vendors in the space. Their sales teams don't spend six days a week on the road and go to six customers a day, but they have a sales machine. And the've managed to leverage that to get inside what we call the buying tornado of many emergent technologies and then sell the company before the tornado ends. They still have Norton, of course. Even though practically every other product in the portfolio has come and gone over the years. What does all of this mean? The Broadcom acquisition of the enterprise security division maybe tells us that Symantec is about to leverage that $10+ billion dollars to buy more software companies. And sell more companies after a little integration and incubation, then getting out of it before the ocean gets too red, the tech too stale, or before Microsoft sherlocks them. Because that's what they do. And they do it profitably every single time. We often think of how an acquiring company gets a new product - but next time you see a company buying another one, think about this: that company probably had multiple offers. What did the team at the company being acquired get out of this deal? And we'll work on that in the next episode, when we explore the history of Broadcom. Thank you for sticking with us through this episode of the History of Computing Podcast and have a great day!

Voice of Veritas Podcast
VMworld: Demystifying the cloud with the AWS and Veritas partnership

Voice of Veritas Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2018 6:59


In this episode of the Voice of Veritas podcast, we’re digging into the truth in information. Your host Bradley Tips, Director Strategic Alliances, Veritas, interviews Tres Vance, Sr. Solutions Architect, AWS at VMworld as they dig into the partnership with AWS. Veritas and AWS are integrated in multiple dimensions such as the integration around NetBackup, Backup Exec as well as Veritas Resiliency Platform. No matter the use case, Veritas and AWS have you covered. Together we’re demystifying the idea of going to the cloud, simplifying customers’ challenges they’re having on-premises. Listen to the full podcast to learn more about the Veritas and AWS partnership.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SMB Community Podcast by Karl W. Palachuk
Symantec Heavily Focused on MSP Endpoint Protection

SMB Community Podcast by Karl W. Palachuk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2012 7:15


I dropped by the Symantec booth at IT Nation and had some fun horsing around with Anne Stobaugh and Dal Gemmell. They brought me up to speed with some of the latest programs at Syamantec. Anne made a point that Symantec is trying to be very MSP friendly. They offer a monthly subscription buying program AND promised that you don’t have to worry about Symantec contacting end users! The monthly program is a buy-what-you-need model and great for cash flow. A few products are available in this program either on-premise or in the Cloud, including End Point Protection and Backup Exec. Dal focuses on that Endpoint Protection piece and says Symantec is totally supporting Windows 8 devices at this time. As he says, “In this business, if you don’t adapt quickly to change, you’re not going to be in business for very long.” Symantec is also a big supporter of HTG. They support some groups directly and try to have a tight relationship. Their goal her is to stay tuned to what MSPs are looking for. Symantec has an “MSP Specialist” team that focuses completely on MSP products and issues. You can contact the MSP team at … msp@symantec.com or call 855-210-1101. Download the Interview with Anne Stobaugh and Dal Gemmell from Symantec here. For more information on Symantec, visit www.symatec.com.   For more information on IT Nation, visit www.TheITNation.com. For more information on ConnectWise, visit www.ConnectWise.com.  

PowerScripting Podcast
Episode 198 - PowerScripting Podcast - Kirk Freiheit from Symantec on Backup Exec 2012 and their PowerShell module

PowerScripting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2012 60:52


Kirk Freiheit from Symantec on Backup Exec 2012 and their new PowerShell module

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase
Backup Exec 12.5 & Backup Exec System Recover 8.5 Product Overview

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2008


In this podcast, Vice President for Backup Exec in the Symantec Data Protection Group, Pat Hanavan, provides product overviews of Backup Exec 12.5 and Backup Exec System Recovery 8.5. Hanavan gives and in depth look at the features and benefits of each product, and talks about how the new releases play into Symantec’s Next Generation [...]

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase
Data Protection and Virtual Environments

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2008


In this podcast, Sr. Vice President of the Symantec Data Protection Group, Deepak Mohan, provides a high-level overview of key trends in virtualization and data protection, and how Backup Exec 12.5 can help organizations protect their data in virtual environments. For more information, visit: www.backupexec.com

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase
Next Generation Data Protection

Symantec: A Connected Social Media Showcase

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2008


In this podcast, Sr. Vice President of the Symantec Data Protection Group, Deepak Mohan, provides an overview of how the recent release of Backup Exec 12.5 integrates into the broader Symantec Next Generation Data Protection strategy. For more information, visit: www.backupexec.com