http://news.com.com/2100-1009-994038.html?tag=fd_top

Wi-Fi firewall gets U.S. approval
By Paul Festa 
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
March 25, 2003, 10:52 AM PT
http://news.com.com/2100-1009-994038.html 

A start-up's wireless security product won approval from a federal
standards organization, paving the way for resale by Hewlett-Packard to
the U.S. government. 
Cranite Systems, a 3-year-old start-up based in San Jose, Calif., said
its WirelessWall Software Suite, a firewall for wireless networks, had
earned the Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) 140-2
certification from the National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST), a division of the U.S. Department of Commerce. 

The certification, granted March 21, makes Cranite eligible to sell its
wares to the U.S. government. Computer giant Hewlett-Packard plans to
resell Cranite's software to government agencies. 

"It's a requirement--if you want to sell wireless security products to
the government you need FIPS," said Max Mancini, Cranite's vice
president of engineering. "The NIST certification says we're using the
right cryptography algorithms and protecting and generating our keys
correctly. And even from a nongovernment-customer perspective, this is a
stamp of approval that says Cranite has done what they're claiming." 

The NIST approval is purely technical. Separate export licenses issued
to the company by the U.S. Department of State certify that the products
meet the nation's strict cryptography export laws. 

Cranite, which raised $12 million in September from investors including
BV Capital and Diamondhead Ventures, is hardly alone in offering
security solutions for wireless networks. Competitors include Fortress
Technologies, Vernier Networks and Blue Socket. 

Mancini said Cranite and its competition are filling a pressing need as
wireless networks proliferate. 

"A lot of companies are trying to approach wireless security because
there is such a significant concern," Mancini said. "The native security
that's included in Wi-Fi does not protect the network. It can be cracked
by tools widely and easily available on the Internet. And trying to
secure wireless networks with technology that was designed for wired
networks is a bad idea." 

Hewlett-Packard anticipated a lasting role as a Cranite reseller. 

"We look forward to a long-term strategic relationship with Cranite,"
Bruce Klein, vice president of HP Federal, said in a statement. 

Reply via email to