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Firmware attacks can be a particularly pernicious threat for organizations. This is because an attack vectored on firmware can implant malware before the operating system (OS)—and thus the software-based security running on that OS—has even started. Yet less than half of organizations have taken steps to harden their systems against firmware attacks, even as such attacks have grown five times more frequent in the last five years.5 At the end of the day, workloads are only as secure as the entire stacks that they run on.

To meet this exponential growth to the frequency, variety and costliness of malware threats, modern security must be multilayered. This is because malware can compromise systems at the hardware and firmware levels, or during boot up, all areas where solely software-defined security is impotent. To counter this vulnerability, modern server security is not a single-pronged strategy. It must be built into the entire infrastructure stack.

Take this brief survey and learn how the combination of next-generation Dell EMC™ PowerEdge™ servers and Windows Server 2022 simplifies for administrators the important task of aligning hardware, firmware and OS in order to adequately secure business-critical workloads.

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Vendor:
Dell Technologies and Intel
Posted:
Feb 21, 2023
Published:
Feb 21, 2023
Format:
HTML
Type:
White Paper

This resource is no longer available.