Jump to content

Ceedo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ceedo Technologies (2005) Ltd.
Company typePrivate
IndustryComputer software
Founded2005
Headquarters
Key people
Dror Wettenstein, Founder;
Assaf David, CEO
ProductsMalwareLocker, Ceedo Cloud Management System
Websitewww.ceedo.com

Ceedo is a cybersecurity company based in Netanya, Israel. Ceedo uses software virtualization technologies to create application containers, claiming to eliminate or reduce endpoint security threats like viruses or ransomware.

History

[edit]

Ceedo Technologies was originally founded as a software virtualization platform by Dror Wettenstein in 2005. Since then, Ceedo has been using virtualization technology to make productivity tools for individual and enterprise use. In recent years, the company has followed the rising global trend of employment of virtualization in cybersecurity[1] and shifted its focus to that industry.

Ceedo Personal

[edit]

Ceedo Personal was a portable operating system that allowed users to carry applications on portable media (such as USB flash drives and pocket hard drives), running them inside a virtual environment, while using resources from the host PC (screen, processing power, drives, internet connection, printers). Applications were launched in an independent environment, allowing them to run regardless of the specific settings of the host computer.

Ceedo Personal has been licensed by consumer storage vendors including Lexar,[2] Seagate,[3] Verbatim, Maxell, ExcelStor, Venzero and others. The product has been pre-bundled on millions of devices and sold worldwide.

Ceedo Personal has often been compared to another product, U3, similar in both appearance and functionality.

Ceedo Enterprise

[edit]

Introduced in 2008,[4] Ceedo Enterprise was a version of Ceedo platform designed for business use and included remote management capabilities. Ceedo Enterprise was designed to be carried primarily on encrypted hardware and could have been customized and pre-configured.

Ceedo and Citrix partnered in 2008 to create a portable version of the Citrix XenApp client.[5]

Cybersecurity

[edit]

After several years of hiatus, Ceedo resumed operations in 2016. The company continued developing virtualization technologies, with focus switched to cybersecurity.

Ceedo has several patents pending for its virtualization technology.

Technology

[edit]

Ceedo claims to protect computers from being compromised (from both known and unknown malware threats, including zero-day attacks) by using application containers. Such application containers create isolation barrier between potentially vulnerable application (like web browsers) and the host system.

Application containers

[edit]

Ceedo utilizes application containerization technology and context-based access controls to isolate web-facing applications and attempt to completely separate all untrusted content from the host. Potential malware execution is privilege-restricted that way and confined only to the isolated container created by Ceedo.

Ceedo's context-based approach determines context by looking at the security classification of the application/process requesting to operate on a file, the file on which it is requesting to operate, and the nature of the operation (i.e. read/write). From this context, Ceedo derives the permissions it will allow the requesting application/process, the boundaries of the security container that encapsulates its execution and the isolation policies applied to its boundaries with the host system.

Ceedo containers exist solely on the host and use only local resources.

Similar solutions

[edit]

Companies like Symantec and Bromium use similar containerization technologies for their products.[6]

MalwareLocker

[edit]
Ceedo Enterprise
Developer(s)Ceedo
Operating systemWindows 7 SP1, Windows 8.1, Windows 10
Available inEnglish
Typeapplication virtualization, computer security
Licensecommercial / closed source
Websitehttp://www.ceedo.com

MalwareLocker is currently the only Ceedo product.

It uses Ceedo application containers to create an isolated virtual environment and a security perimeter around the application and related data. Users can continue to use protected applications as they otherwise would, while all interactions between the application and the host computer are filtered through intelligent security checkpoints that ensure potential threats are confined to the container. The outcome is a protection measure that can be effective against all malware infections and is not dependent on threat detection.

MalwareLocker is primarily sold to enterprises, and is used to protect their employees against web-borne threats. It is also used to secure endpoints from threats potentially coming from removable media or network.

Content Disarm & Reconstruction

[edit]

Ceedo claims to have a partnership with leading firms in Content Disarm & Reconstruction field. This technology is used to supplement Ceedo containers and allow users to safely transfer files downloaded from the Internet.

Ceedo Cloud Management System

[edit]

Ceedo Cloud Management System is a web-based management system that is sold together with MalwareLocker, allowing administrators to compose and configure policies for MalwareLocker units and assign them to remote users from a central location.

See also

[edit]
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Babu Tharayanil, Midhun; Whitney, Gill; Aiash, Mahdi; Benzaid, Chafika (2015-08-22). "Virtualization and Cyber Security: Arming Future Security Practitioners". 2015 IEEE Trustcom/BigDataSE/ISPA. pp. 1398–1402. doi:10.1109/Trustcom.2015.537. ISBN 978-1-4673-7952-6. S2CID 33127135.
  2. ^ Pogue, David (2006-06-15). "A Flash Drive That Holds Your Computer". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-07-28.
  3. ^ Patrick Schmid (2007-04-12). "2.5" External HDD Spring Fever". Tom's Hardware. Retrieved 2022-07-28.
  4. ^ Ceedo Enterprise announcement: "Ceedo Launches an Application Virtualization Solution for the Enterprise". Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  5. ^ Ceedo and Citrix announcement: "Ceedo Announces Ceedo Enterprise for Citrix XenApp". Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  6. ^ "The Bromium Security Hypervisor -- Virtualization Review". Virtualization Review. Retrieved 2018-10-15.