VMware has added more security capabilities to Project Northstar, its security and networking service due out next year. Credit: CIS VMware has added more security features to its forthcoming on-demand multi-cloud networking and security service called Northstar that it previewed during its August VMware Explore 2022 conference. VMware said then that Northstar will provide a central console for turning up networking and security services across private clouds and VMware Cloud deployments that run on public clouds. It will include VMware services such as Network Detection and Response, NSX Intelligence, advanced load balancing and Web Application Firewall. Within Northstar, Network Detection and Response support will provide scalable threat detection and response for workloads deployed in private and/or public clouds. The company this week said it is adding support for its Hybrid Cloud Extension (HCX) software. The extension, known as HCX+, will let customers move workloads between multiple on-premises environments as well as VMware Cloud on AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure and others. “The role of HDX+ is to facilitate workload migration, and within Northstar that will let customers, for example, move workloads from thousands of VMs in their private cloud to a public cloud,” said Tom Gillis, senior vice president and general manager at VMware. “And since we can look into the application layer of all these workloads we can apply unique security analytics that can identify the East-West or the collateral or movement of an attack. These days, that’s the name of the game.” “Because we’re constantly changing and updating the algorithms, security and policy are always up-to-date, and since we’ll be seeing everybody’s traffic we can do global correlation across the entire spectrum of workloads regardless of where they are running,” Gillis said. Northstar is expected to launch possibly next spring. CarbonBlack XDR This week VMware also announced VMware Carbon Black XDR to bolster threat detection and attack prevention across iendpoints and networks. Carbon Black is VMware’s endpoint, container, and application-workload security platform that has tight integration across VMware’s family of products. Extended detection and response (XDR) centrally gathers and analyzes security information from a variety of sources to more quickly respond to threats and establish core enterprise-wide security policies. Carbon Black XDR will do that by utilizing VMware’s Contexa threat intelligence database which the vendor says records and processes over 1.5 trillion endpoint events and over 10 billion network flows daily. Contexa and Carbon Black’s knowledge of applications combined with NSX’s network intelligence can help security teams identify threats and inform decisions about policies to block them, Gillis said. The goal is to improve lateral security for traditional and modern applications by enabling inspection of each endpoint, packet, and process across their environment, Gillis said. VMware Carbon Black XDR is available in early access to select customers. Related content news analysis Chip shortages push hyperscalers to build their own Financial pressures of partnering with Nvidia for semiconductors capable of running hyperscale workloads have forced Google, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft into the processor market. By Elizabeth Montalbano May 20, 2024 4 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI High-Performance Computing news HPE updates block storage services The company adds new storage controller support as well as AWS. By Andy Patrizio May 20, 2024 3 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center analysis Network teams are ready to switch tool vendors IT orgs feel less locked into their network management tools, particularly as they look to apply AI/ML to tasks such as intelligent alerting, change management, and capacity management. By Shamus McGillicuddy May 20, 2024 4 mins Network Management Software Network Security analysis BGP: What is border gateway protocol, and how does it work? BGP is how the autonomous networks that make up the internet share routing information to find the best route for IP traffic. CISA describes BGP as 'the most important part of the internet you’ve probably never heard of.' By Keith Shaw May 17, 2024 11 mins Routers Internet Network Security PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe