Breach Detection Platform Targets Higher Ed Protection

A company that specializes in data breach detection has introduced a version of its technology specifically for colleges and universities. The Eastwind 4 Education platform from Eastwind Networks is intended to monitor network traffic loads and alert security administrators to anomalous activities that could signal a data breach. Currently, at least one institution is testing out the system.

Eastwind uses a combination of behavior analytics, machine learning, malware analysis and threat intelligence to compare network traffic to data from previous breaches in order to identify potential hazards. When it uncovers something suspicious, it alerts IT personnel within the school for action.

"As networks go, a university is as diverse and dynamic as they come. The number of users, most with multiple devices, presents a natural fit for active breach detection," said Paul Kraus, president and CEO of Eastwind, in a press release.

Added Danny Yeo, who leads a team of IT professionals within the Brigham Young University College of Life Sciences, while businesses can set restrictive policies about bring-your-own-device usage, a university setting is different. "A balance between security and functionality is crucial. The majority of our BYOD traffic comes from student laptops and mobile devices," Yeo said. "We want to offer the same openness and accessibility for online exploration as we do when people visit our campus in person. To facilitate that experience, we needed a security solution that goes beyond a simple firewall and end user virus protection, a solution that looks at everything."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • robots organizing stacks of papers

    An AI Adoption Imperative: Centralized Sources of Governed Truth

    Strategies for enterprise teams who aim to build a data foundation to move the institution from AI experimentation to real-world execution.

  • Neon blue security locks with a single red highlight

    AI Shifts Cybersecurity Focus from Finding Flaws to Fixing Them

    For decades, one of cybersecurity's most difficult challenges has been finding vulnerabilities before attackers do. A growing number of security professionals now say artificial intelligence is changing that equation, shifting the focus from discovering flaws to fixing them quickly enough to prevent exploitation.

  • digital data protection and cyber security

    White House Launches New AI Security Framework

    President Donald Trump has issued a new executive order aimed at maintaining United States AI leadership while addressing the security risks posed by increasingly powerful AI systems.

  • Profile silhouette of a person thoughtfully touching their chin, overlaid with transparent data visualizations and digital interface elements suggesting artificial intelligence and analytics.

    The Institutional Knowledge Shift Is Reshaping Higher Ed IT

    Higher education IT leaders are navigating a quiet but consequential transition: Experienced team members are retiring or leaving for private-sector roles, and the teams replacing them are smaller, newer, and often stretched thin. The result is a structural shift in how technology decisions are made, executed, and sustained.