Technology Category
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Hybrid Cloud
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Public Cloud
Applicable Industries
- Glass
- National Security & Defense
Applicable Functions
- Human Resources
- Maintenance
Use Cases
- Inventory Management
- Tamper Detection
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
About The Customer
The customer in this case study is a prominent Museum in D.C. that documents, studies, and interprets history. The museum has welcomed more than 40 million visitors, including 99 heads of state and more than ten million school-age children. It keeps one of the world's largest archives of significant historical events, focused on their digital preservation and storage. More than 16.5 million people from over 200 countries visit the site annually, which is available in 16 languages. The museum's systems are barraged by hate emails, vicious social media posts, and increasingly sophisticated 5th generation cyber-attacks from around the world.
The Challenge
The prominent Museum in D.C., which documents, studies, and interprets history, faced a significant challenge in preserving and protecting irreplaceable documentation, photographs, videos, and recordings. The museum, which has welcomed over 40 million visitors, including 99 heads of state and more than ten million school-age children, was under constant threat from fifth-generation cyber-attacks. The museum's systems were barraged by hate emails, vicious social media posts, and increasingly sophisticated cyber-attacks from around the world. The museum also needed to protect user identities and credentials against account hijackings and secure SaaS and hosted applications across a multi-vendor hybrid cloud environment. The security team's first challenge was to manage and protect user identities across the entire infrastructure, with employees and partners located around the world with varying levels of online access to institutional assets.
The Solution
To address these challenges, the museum turned to the Check Point Infinity Architecture. This included Check Point CloudGuard SaaS, Check Point CloudGuard IaaS, Check Point SandBlast Network, and Check Point R80 Security Management. The museum chose SaaS applications, including Microsoft Office 365, Google Suite, file-sharing, and operations solutions, each hosted in its respective vendor's cloud and protected by Check Point CloudGuard SaaS. This provided zero-day threat, identity, and data protection while preventing employee account breaches. The museum also utilized Check Point CloudGuard IaaS to protect its applications that had been moved to public clouds. Check Point CloudGuard IaaS extended the same protection as the Check Point firewalls to the museum's applications in these public cloud environments. Check Point SandBlast provided multi-layered protection from known threats and zero-day attacks using Threat Emulation technology, as well as identity awareness, content awareness, antivirus, anti-bot, intrusion prevention, application control, and URL filtering capabilities.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
Data Capture for Afghanistan Forces
Electronic equipments on the field of Afghanistan provided information on the status of the vehicle and to identify potential threats surrounding it to the British Force. The monitoring and interpretation of this data requires robust and sophisticated digitization for data capture and communication.
Case Study
Enhancing Security and Compliance in Remitly's Global Money Transfer Service with Fastly
Remitly, an online remittance service, was faced with the challenge of securing its proprietary global transfer network. The company needed a security solution that could meet PCI requirements and protect customers' sensitive transactions through its mobile application. The solution had to be capable of defending against new and emerging attack types without impacting performance. Remitly also had to deal with irregular traffic patterns, such as a sudden spike in account transfers from a small network segment on the Pacific coastline of South America. The company needed to determine in real time whether such traffic indicated an attack or valid requests. A traditional web application firewall (WAF) would not be able to distinguish this traffic, potentially leading to customer frustration if the IP was blacklisted.
Case Study
Discrete Manufacturing Industries (Fiberglass Pipe)
The implementation of ERP software in a Discrete Manufacturing organization needs to be strategic, irrespective of its size and capacity. The client had already implemented an ERP system which fulfilled their requirements but was not efficient enough. Efficiency here meant Synchronized Planning, Updating and Multisite Planning. Planning at client’s place was done outside the ERP system. Lack of proper synchronization to the ERP system paved way to huge delays in the changes getting updated in the system. These delays caused disruption in achieving delivery schedules. Multisite Planning is a solution to an organization which has multiple production units (may or may not be geographically separated) and thus needs planning across these units to synchronize production activities within them. The client also has multiple factories and hence Production Planning control is very essential in their case. Since Multisite planning was not possible with Baan ERP system, this was another bottleneck for the client.
Case Study
Major Aerospace Company Automates Asset Management
The O&M division of an aerospace and global security company was using spreadsheets to manually track more than 3,000 assets assigned to students and staff. Maintaining audit trails for this high volume of equipment became increasingly time-consuming and challenging. The chore involved knowing precisely what equipment was on hand, what had been issued, its location and the name of the custodial owner of each item. Every aspect of this task was carried owner of each item. Every aspect of this task was carried out by individuals with spreadsheets. Manually documenting the full lifecycle of each asset added to the burden. This included tracking maintenance requirements and records, incidents and damages, repairs, calibrations, depreciation, and end-of-life data.
Case Study
Securing a Large Data Center in the EMEA Region: An IoT Case Study
A leading data-center operator in the EMEA region, with multiple facilities spanning over 25,000 square meters, faced significant security challenges. The operator experienced interruptions in their internal IT network due to unsupervised work of third-party technicians. Despite having a high-end building control system that provided 24x7 monitoring and control to all the building’s infrastructure, the data center was vulnerable from a cyber perspective as it was connected to the IT network infrastructure. The operator launched an urgent OT cyber security project that included both IT-OT network segmentation and OT network asset mapping and anomaly detection. The main objectives were to harden the security of the server systems, secure the facility’s power supply and server cooling system, strengthen the segmentation between building and operational systems, create a visual OT network map, and set up a system for presenting supply-chain attacks that may threaten the data center through equipment vendors’ maintenance activities.
Case Study
Leveraging Graph Technology for Enhanced Cybersecurity: A Case Study on MITRE's CyGraph
MITRE, a federally-funded, not-for-profit company that manages seven national research and development laboratories in the United States, was grappling with the challenge of managing an influx of cybersecurity data. The constant changes in network environments were impacting the security posture of U.S. government agencies. Intrusion alerts, anti-virus warnings, and seemingly benign events like logins, service connections, and file share access were all potentially associated with adversary activity. The cybersecurity researchers at MITRE needed to go beyond rudimentary assessments of security posture and attack response. This required merging isolated data into higher-level knowledge of network-wide attack vulnerabilities and mission readiness. The challenge was not the lack of information, but the ability to assemble disparate pieces of information into an overall analytic picture for situational awareness, optimal courses of action, and maintaining mission readiness. The team also struggled with fully comprehending a given security environment and mapping all known vulnerabilities.