RSA, the security division of EMC, provided the technology to Canon USA to meet FIPS 140 standard for a US government smartcard solution.
The Digital Office Solution for Public Sector helps government agencies capture critical information from paper, fax, and electronic data sources; convert the data into content ready for processing in order to provide faster service to constituents and others; redeploy staff to higher value work; manage both process and visibility in parallel; and increase overall productivity. Agencies improve the management of paper documents that lead to high costs, inefficient processes, and compliance risks.
It is a commonly unspoken perception that governments are large behemoths that are slow to action, not afraid to spend money, and don't see themselves accountable to their customers - the public. Ron Goh, president of EMC Southeast Asia, discusses some of the changes taking place in the region around efficiency.
Almost 20 years since the commercialization of the Internet, no business or individual could possibly function without it. But the World Wide Web is not without its flaws. The online threat environment has intensified in the last few years due an increasing pool of sophisticated fraudsters and the availability of new technologies that has facilitated such criminal activities. In this article, Geoff Haydon, Vice President, Asia Pacific, RSA, identifies the Top 8 forms of online attacks to watch out for in 2010.
The Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT), the country’s largest telecommunications company, has selected EMC to strengthen its information infrastructure in order to drive its market position as the preferred full-service provider of voice, video and data at the most attractive price, service quality, content and coverage.
Data loss is a common problem among government organizations. How to protect sensitive data from unauthorized access or accidental loss are two questions that Jeffrey Kok, corporate sales engineer at RSA, covers in this open and fairly frank discussion.
With economies expected to improve from the lull of 2009, Par Botes, EMC CTO for Asia Pacific and Japan predicts a renewed focus on IT as a leader enabling organizations to move forward.
The first step in going green is taking an inventory of what you have and matching your business requirements to your infrastructue. Only through a careful study of your business' computing needs over the near, mid and long-term can you truly develop a computing strategy/platform that fits your business objectives while remaining true to the goals of becoming green.
In today’s business climate, it no longer makes sense for IT organizations to rely on traditional methods of managing information growth. In 2010, I anticipate a stronger push for more services and applications in cloud computing due to the cost effectiveness and scalability such solutions can provide if deployed effectively.
When it comes to protecting data there is an almost adulterous relationship between storage and security technologies. It's almost impossible to plan a data protection strategy without incorporating security elements throughout the lifecycle of the data - from creation, thru transit, storage, and finally its destruction, in some cases long-term storage.















