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Program Terms

  DBI, in its sole discretion, shall determine if an organization qualifies for FREE licenses

  1st year maintenance of $4,314 is not included with this FREE 2 CPU offer

  Software License Agreement and Purchase Order must be received by December 31, 2006

  Offer includes 2 FREE CPU licenses of Brother-WatchDog

  • Additional licenses may be obtained at list price
  • Volume discounts may be available
  • Government and Non-profit discounts may be available to qualified organizations
  • Contact DBI for details

  Satisfaction is Guaranteed

  • License Agreement provides for a Trial and Acceptance Period

 


 

Editorial Contacts


Brian Baker, DBI
Phone: (512) 249-2324 x123
Email: brian.baker@database-brothers.com

 


 

DBI is an IBM Advanced Business Partner

 


New Window: Click to read PDF Article
Free PDF: eWeek Article: IT Pros Say They Can't Stop
Data Breaches
(We can help)

DBI Declares War on Identity Theft with New Release of Brother-WatchDog Digital Surveillance Solution for Oracle and DB2

Free Licenses Available for Government,
Higher Education and Healthcare Customers

Austin, TX – (November 14, 2006) - Database-Brothers, Inc. (DBI), an industry leading provider of database performance and accountability solutions for Oracle and DB2 LUW, today announced a new version of Brother-WatchDog™, a breakthrough software solution designed to capture and record database activities to create immutable audit trails and hold privileged users accountable. Featuring robust data auditing capabilities for both Oracle and DB2 LUW databases, Brother-WatchDog helps organizations fight the risks of identity and information theft, enables PCI and HIPAA compliance, and improves SOX preventative and detective internal controls.

“Today’s corporate data is literally naked and exposed to the increasing risk of theft,” said Scott Hayes, CEO and founder of DBI. “From personal credit card data to private medical records, today’s businesses are an open buffet of information. And yet, even though their most valuable data assets are exposed, businesses around the globe lack the data auditing tools necessary to identify data breaches. This means that any privileged user with data access rights can come right in and consume as much data as they want without detection.”

“Through detection of unusual behavior, database activity monitoring can limit insider misuse of database systems, enforce separation of duties for database administrators and limit certain external attacks — all without affecting database performance, requiring structural database changes or forcing application changes,” said Rich Mogull, research vice president, Gartner in the July 12, 2006 Gartner research note: “Top Five Steps to Prevent Data Loss and Information Leaks.”

“The risk of identity theft is further exacerbated by the increasing use of business process outsourcing, and the out-sourcing of out-sourcing,” said Marie Buretta, an IBM GOLD Consultant and President of Marie Buretta Inc. “The result is that poorly encrypted data is copied and sent, copied and sent, copied and sent – from outsourcer to outsourcer. This means sensitive data, that can in many situations be easily decoded, is now all over the globe. There is simply no audit trail of who has the data, how many times it has been copied and forwarded, and how to reel it in after the outsourcing effort is complete. It is just a security disaster waiting to happen.”

Digital Surveillance with Brother-WatchDog

DBI’s new release of Brother-WatchDog is a powerful database activity monitoring and auditing solution designed to track access and updates to corporate database data according to configurable business process guidelines. Like a video camera, Brother-WatchDog captures and records all configured data activities to create immutable audit trails and hold privileged users accountable. Brother-WatchDog tracks Web application end user identities and locations, and correlates them to their database statement activities. This gives companies the power to hold all privileged users – including DBAs, decision analysts, clients and application users – accountable for the data they change or simply view.

Brother-WatchDog can answer:

  • Who initiated data access or updates
  • What data was accessed or updated
  • Where the activity originated from (specifically, what IP Address)
  • When the database activity occurred (date and time)
  • How much data was impacted
  • Whether the access or update succeeded or failed
  • What was the cost of the activity
Using an unobtrusive Web Server “zap,” the new version captures end user identity and location “fingerprint” information and passes this fingerprint into the audited database via the existing connection pool. Here Brother-WatchDog correlates the fingerprint identity to its database activities. This information is secured using tamper evident seals, or digital signatures, to assure management and auditors that the audit data accurately reflects genuine database activities.

With a portfolio of “out-of-the-box” built-in reports, Brother-WatchDog provides immediate insight into suspicious and actionable database activities. Flexible, easy-to-use customizable ad hoc reporting features help customers to quickly find “needles in haystacks” or perform forensic data research. Brother-WatchDog can span a heterogeneous database enterprise to provide audit capabilities across an entire organization.

Promotion, Pricing and Availability

Over 71 percent of data breaches in 2006 have occurred in government, higher education and healthcare organizations. To help fight the war on identity theft and help eliminate data crimes and corruption worldwide, DBI is offering free licenses of the newest Brother-WatchDog database auditing software solution to organizations in these three industries. Free licenses will be available, for up to 2 CPUs, for all orders placed by government, higher education and healthcare organizations before December 31, 2006.

Brother-WatchDog for Oracle, with support for Oracle 9.2 and 10g, and Brother-WatchDog for DB2 are both available now. Non-promotional pricing starts at $10,785 per CPU. US patent pending. For more information, please visit: http://www.database-brothers.com/war.

About Database-Brothers, Inc.

Database-Brothers, Inc. (DBI), headquartered in Austin, Texas, is an industry leader in distributed DB2 LUW and Oracle database accountability and performance best practices methodologies, services, and products that enable companies to accelerate business accountability and performance with clarity. For more information about DBI, visit www.database-brothers.com or call (866) 773-8789.

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Database-Brothers, Inc, DBI, the DBI logos, Brother-Eagle, Brother-WatchDog, and all other DBI product or service names are registered trademarks or trademarks of Database-Brothers, Inc. All other trademarks or registered trademarks belong to their respective companies. © 2006, Database-Brothers, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

Brother-WatchDog logo

Is your data naked?


  • Computer security breaches effect 90% of corporations and cause $17 billion in damages a year
    Harvard Business Review
  • 66% of IT professionals believe their company is not effective at detecting data breaches
    Deborah Rothberg, eWeek.com August 2006
  • 40 Million US consumer credit card numbers illegaly accessed for fraudulent intent
    Washington Post Staff Writers
  • 50% of organizations aren't doing enough to control the use of consumer data
    Richard Snow, SearchCRM.com October 2006
  • Firms with superior IT governance have more than 25% higher profits than firms with poor governance given the same strategic objectives
    IT Governance,
    Peter Weill and Jeanne W. Ross
  • 37% of enterprise businesss do not monitor, or do not know how they monitor their databases
    Joseph McKendrick, Research Analyst
  • The names, addresses, phone numbers, social security numbers and dates of birth of nearly 1.4 million Californians were accessed through a known vulnerability of a university research database
    The Register®
  • Only 37% of IT professionals believe their company is effective at detecting data breaches
    Deborah Rothberg, eWeek.com August 2006
  • Georgia Technology Authority (GTA) compromises the names, addresses, Social Security numbers and bank account numbers of approximately 570,000 pension plans administered by the State of Georgia
    Brian Koerner, IDTheft.about.com
  • Only 17% felt their company could correctly detect a small breach (less than 100 records) more than 18% of the time
    Deborah Rothberg, eWeek.com August 2006
  • Most fraud or misuse of data is perpetrated by employees
    Richard Snow, SearchCRM.com October 2006
  • Choice Point penalized $15 million for their breach of over 172,000 records
    MSNBC, Bob Sullivan
  • Visa USA Inc. issues $10,000 to $100,000 fines per month to noncompliant merchants
    Wall Street Journal Online
  • The cost of a mid-range breach consisting of tens of thousands of accounts will range from $90 to $100 per account
    John Pescatore, ESJ.com September 2006
  • Choice Point's investors lost $720 million due to a 10% drop in their stock after announcing their data breach
    John Pescatore, ESJ.com September 2006
  • 84% of IT Directors and Managers rate IT security as a top-five priority. Only 11% believe that their networks are very safe from attack
    CDW-G Higher Education
    IT Security Report Card 2006
  • 58% of higher education institutions have experienced at least one security incident in the last year
    CDW-G Higher Education
    IT Security Report Card 2006

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