Polycom Teams With McAfee To Enhance SecurityPolycom Teams With McAfee To Enhance Security

Increasingly, video conferencing has emerged as a way that business professionals collaborate. Since these exchanges can often occur on the fly, security has been a concern, one that Polycom and McAfee are trying to assuage.

Paul Korzeniowski, Contributor

July 28, 2010

1 Min Read
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Increasingly, video conferencing has emerged as a way that business professionals collaborate. Since these exchanges can often occur on the fly, security has been a concern, one that Polycom and McAfee are trying to assuage.The two companies forged an alliance to develop a framework for Secure Unified Communications and Collaboration. The partners plan to incorporate McAfee's threat protection solutions, including the McAfee ePolicy Orchestrator console, into Polycom UC endpoints and Intelligent Core. In addition, they are expected to align their monitoring and provisioning tools.

Currently, small and medium businesses need to cobble together security products from vendors, such as McAfee, with collaboration tools, such as those offered by Polycom. The new partnership will result in bundling of those capabilities, so deployment and ongoing maintenance could become simpler. On the flip side, businesses may already have other security tools in place, so they would not want to deploy the McAfee solution and may even find that it conflicts with those tools.

During the past few months, Polycom has forged alliances with a number of vendors, including HP and Microsoft. The video conferencing vendor has been trying to expand its reach to compete with Tandberg, which was acquired by Cisco early in the year. The latest agreement enables Polycom to match one more function (security) that Cisco could bundle with its telepresence systems. Going forward, the question arises: will businesses opt for the Polycom approach, which involves several partners, or feel more comfortable purchasing video conferencing products that come from one vendor, namely Cisco?

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About the Author

Paul Korzeniowski

Contributor

Paul Korzeniowski is a freelance contributor to information who has been examining IT issues for more than two decades. During his career, he has had more than 10,000 articles and 1 million words published. His work has appeared in the Boston Herald, Business 2.0, eSchoolNews, Entrepreneur, Investor's Business Daily, and Newsweek, among other publications. He has expertise in analytics, mobility, cloud computing, security, and videoconferencing. Paul is based in Sudbury, Mass., and can be reached at [email protected]

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