Ransomware protection for on-premises systems and infrastructure is the goal of the latest release from “smart infrastructure” vendor Nebulon. Credit: iStock Smart infrastructure provider Nebulon today announced the immediate availability of TripLine, an early warning system for cryptographically based ransomware attacks on on-premises systems. It’s designed to quickly identify the precise time and system location where an attack has occurred.Nebulon said that the new service uses two techniques to achieve this aim. The first is the “secure enclave,” which is a domain isolated from the infrastructure that includes core management and storage functions. Second, it embeds the TripLine functionality into the company’s core Nebulon ON cloud control plane.Ransomware is malware that typically encrypts a victim’s files. The attacker then demands a ransom from the victim to restore access to the data upon payment. TripLine, according to the company, works by identifying encrypted vs. unencrypted blocks in a user’s storage arrays. Twice a minute, the results of that calculation are sent to the Nebulon ON cloud service, which compares it to the usual average of encrypted blocks — if the system notices a sudden increase in encrypted blocks, it generates an alert. Protecting server-based infrastructureThe idea is to provide a secure alternative to hyperconverged infrastructure systems, which, according to Nebulon, are highly vulnerable to encryption attacks because there’s no isolation between infrastructure and the applications running on them. Even anti-cyberattack systems that rely on snapshotting can become corrupted, making it much more difficult to recover from such an attack.“This leaves enterprises with no choice but to re-install and reconfigure operating systems and clustering software, then recover application data from backup servers which have also likely been compromised,” Nebulon said in a press release. According to David Vellante, an analyst and co-founder of SiliconANGLE, there are other ways to get the functionality that TripLine provides, but the idea of having an out-of-the-box solution for this particular niche — given Nebulon’s position as a provider of cloud-like management functionality for on-premises systems — is attractive.“From what I can tell, they’re combining threat detection with an isolation architecture using secure enclaves, which is a relatively new approach first popularized by cloud players like AWS via their Arm-based Nitro system,” he said. “So this has certain aspects of that capability — i.e. isolation, cloud native experience – but it brings this capability to on-prem infrastructrure.”Nebulon also announced smartDefense, an infrastructure security toolkit that includes threat vector detection and a secure boot system that maintains a known-good configuration for further defense against cryptographically based ransomware attacks. Both smartDefense and TripLine are available today, and are part of Nebulon’s all-inclusive licensing for its ON Pro and ON Edge suites. Those products are sold via server vendor partners like HPE, Lenovo and Dell, and priced on a per-server, per-term basis. Related content news Bug in EmbedAI can allow poisoned data to sneak into your LLMs The vulnerability can be used to deceive a user into inadvertently uploading and integrating incorrect data into the application’s language model. By Shweta Sharma May 31, 2024 3 mins Generative AI Vulnerabilities news OpenAI accuses Russia, China, Iran, and Israel of misusing its GenAI tools for covert Ops OpenAI’s generative AI tools were used to create and post propaganda content on various geo-political and socio-economic issues across social media platforms, the company said. By Gyana Swain May 31, 2024 4 mins Generative AI news Okta alerts customers against new credential-stuffing attacks Hackers are using credential-stuffing to attack endpoints that are used to support the cross-origin authentication feature. By Shweta Sharma May 31, 2024 4 mins Identity and Access Management Vulnerabilities feature 3 reasons users can’t stop making security mistakes — unless you address them Understanding what’s behind employee security mistakes can help CISOs make meaningful adjustments to their security awareness training strategies. By Ariella Brown May 31, 2024 5 mins Data Breach Risk Management PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe