Denise Shiffman, Juniper Networks | Juniper NXTWORK 2016
01. Denise Shiffman, Juniper Networks, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:20) 02. What Are The New Products You Have In Security. (00:43) 03. Is This A Lot Of Series Of Products. (03:07) 04. Can You Unpack The Ecosystem. (05:37) 05. Are There A Lot Of Services Involved In SDSN. (06:52) 06. Do You Take The Humans Out Of The Bottle Neck On Detection And Enforcement. (08:02) 07. How Do You Attack The Huge Surface Area With Security. (08:49) 08. Talk About The Enforcement Piece. (09:58) 09. How Do You Talk To Customers Around Analytics. (11:21) 10. How Do You Solve The Spear Phishing Problem. (13:12) 11. How Do We Get More Cyber Trained People Out There. (14:59) 12. How Do You Talk About The Buyers Journey With CISO. (16:40) 13. What's Next For Juniper. (17:51) 14. Do You Have The Industries First Containerized Fire Wall. (18:52) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- Is the hottest new thing in security cooking in the networking kitchen? | #NXTWORK by R. Danes | Oct 4, 2016 The cyber security problem is growing at about the same rate as tech innovation itself — which is to say, most folks are having trouble keeping up. The types of threats are multiplying together with access points — like the number of different devices on which people store data. A pure-play security company might find it hard to span all the terrain that is now vulnerable to breach. Could a networking company keeping one foot on home-base and setting the other into security have just enough reach? During Juniper NXTWORK 2016, Denise Shiffman, senior VP of Product Management at Juniper Networks Inc., spoke about the networking company’s new security offerings. “One of the big things that we announced today is really about extending security from the firewall into the network infrastructure, into the switching infrastructure, and stopping threats at the switch-port,” she said. Shiffman told John Furrier (@furrier) and Stu Miniman (@stu), cohost of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, a company dealing only in firewalls would not have the same ease of access into the deeper network. “They would have to do an entire overlay on the network. They would have to put firewalls everywhere. It’s a magnitude difference in cost,” she said. Juniper helps the partners, and itself Shiffman said that Juniper’s new security products utilize open APIs to facilitate partnering and integrating with other companies, which lets them implement new security tech at the rate attackers are hacking the old stuff. “That’s probably the most interesting thing about having an open intelligence platform, and open API. There’s new startups coming everyday with new ways to find threats,” she said. Shiffman added that sharing data — and especially Juniper’s network reach — with the third parties will help them help Juniper, and so on.