Are you keeping an eye on your servers?

Published in Desktop Surveillance on November 14, 2011 by Administrator

ds_thumb.pngServers are the mainstay of the modern business; domain controllers, Citrix servers, Terminal Services, e-mail servers, SQL servers...the list goes on. Whilst companies invest heavily in products, such as firewalls, VPN's  and intrusion detection, to protect these assets  from external attacks, the question remains as to whether they are keeping an eye on the people who actually configure, maintain and administer these machines.

 

In most cases, the servers are accessed by multiple staff members internally, by staff members from home via remote sessions or by third party contractors, and the business has no practical or cost effective way to log this activity for security, compliance, training and troubleshooting purposes. Furthermore, an administrator can start a remote session silently on the server  without alerting the person who is actually in front of the screen.

 

Enter CensorNet Desktop Surveillance. Traditionally used to record screen activity on computers connected to the network (local or remote) for security and to help diagnose software problems, the same recording features can be extended to servers quickly and easily at a fraction of the cost of enterprise level monitoring systems. Unlike other monitoring products, CensorNet Desktop Surveillance records local and remote desktop sessions, Citrix or Terminal Services servers as well as recording tools like LogMeIn and TeamViewer. Simply deploy the agent on each of your servers and have complete peace of mind and a fully searchable, visual, audit trail of activity.

 

Key features include:

 

  • Record and replay screen activity from local or remote sessions;
  • Fragment searching by metadata;
  • Record Citrix and Terminal Services sessions;
  • Record any Windows based server;
  • Active Directory integration;
  • Quick and easy agent deployment;
  • Advanced techniques to compress and store video content;


Start your 30 day evaluation today or contact the CensorNet team for further information.



Last modified on Mon, November 14, 2011 « Back