14. World's Most Secure Flash Drive An ultra-secure encrypted USB flash drive, ideal for military and commercial customers. FIPS 140-2 Validated. SDV ® World's top encryption Hard Drive Hardware based disk encryption – secure your data and eliminate data/identity theft Smart Card MicroSD/MMC Secure MicroSD/MMC storage platform, with integrated Smart Card functionality for mobile applications with high security demands. KoolSpan Secure Voice - end-to-end GSM voice encryption solution The ultimate cost-effective solution for documentation and Email classification Hitachi VeinID Hitachi's Finger Vein attesting technology identifies finger vein patterns that exist inside the human body
Enterprises are becoming acutely aware of the risks posed by mobile storage devices. New incidents are constantly reported . Here are a few examples all over the world from last year. These incident reports can be found online at the following locations: BBC News Online: British Ministry of Defense loses secret data - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7514281.stm USA Today: Small drives cause big problems - http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/2006-08-15-thumbdrives-stolen_x.htm Government Technology: Confidential data lost by USB - http://www.govtech.com/gt/103606?topic=117671 Futuregov: USB drive with patient data mising - http://www.futuregov.net/articles/2009/mar/26/usb-drive-patient-data-missing/ IronKey recently commissioned some research from an organization called the Ponemon Institute that shows just how prevalent the problems has become. Some companies have tried to limit the risk by banning flash drives. But this often proves impractical and impossible to enforce. Bans can be harmful to productivity. Plus, when they are banned users often resort to other resources for transferring data – such as sending it through a personal email account. This is usually a worse outcome because then the data is on the email service somewhere.
Enterprises are becoming acutely aware of the risks posed by mobile storage devices. New incidents are constantly reported . Here are a few examples all over the world from last year. These incident reports can be found online at the following locations: BBC News Online: British Ministry of Defense loses secret data - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7514281.stm USA Today: Small drives cause big problems - http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/2006-08-15-thumbdrives-stolen_x.htm Government Technology: Confidential data lost by USB - http://www.govtech.com/gt/103606?topic=117671 Futuregov: USB drive with patient data mising - http://www.futuregov.net/articles/2009/mar/26/usb-drive-patient-data-missing/ IronKey recently commissioned some research from an organization called the Ponemon Institute that shows just how prevalent the problems has become. Some companies have tried to limit the risk by banning flash drives. But this often proves impractical and impossible to enforce. Bans can be harmful to productivity. Plus, when they are banned users often resort to other resources for transferring data – such as sending it through a personal email account. This is usually a worse outcome because then the data is on the email service somewhere.
IronKey has thousands of customers in numerous market segments.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.
Always-on hardware encryption means that anything put on the device is encrypted – this helps people stay compliant with privacy and security regulations Encryption keys are created on the device – not injected in a chip factory outside the US. No one has a list of the encryption keys used by the IronKey.