Some state and local governments never established demilitarized zone networks because they didn’t consider home offices a threat when they shifted to remote work after the COVID-19 outbreak, security ...
Okay, a question for the hive about security philosophies. Let's say I have a DMZ. In this DMZ I have multiple hosts, providing services to the external network and to the internal network as well.
If you’re still relying on a single firewall, you’re leaving the door wide open for attackers. A cloud DMZ (demilitarized zone) closes that door. It creates an isolated buffer between your business ...
The network admins I have spoken with most frequently refer to that as their basis for “I could see an ESX server in the DMZ hosting nothing but VMs for DMZ resources, but definitely not hosting both ...
pNIC5 -> vSwitch1 -> Portgroup4 (DMZ Network) Since the key is to segregate traffic, but maintain redundancy, this at least segregates out the DMZ traffic, but leaves the hostile VM traffic still ...
Currently I have an FTP (Linux) server sitting in the DMZ of my network and I need to add a Windows IIS server. Rather than add a 2nd physical machine I want to look at merging the two into VM's ...
You've ordered a new firewall, and you want to get it running on your network ASAP. Your first reaction is probably to put every client and server behind it. That's fine for a small company, but a ...