Security
Online Success For Printers
Obviously, if a computer never accesses the Internet, it will be more secure than a computer that is shared by numerous people and interacting with the outside world. Regardless of the intended use, the three basic keys are to install anti-virus software (keep it up to date), never open files from sources one does not know and keep the system properly patched against known vulnerabilities. Besides, there are some precautions that people can take to try to ensure their security.
Security features are:
Firewall
Firewalls are usually used to prevent unauthorized Internet users from accessing private networks connected to the Internet, especially intranets. Each network packet entering or leaving the office network passes through the firewall, which checks each message and blocks the emails that do not meet the specified security standard. The D2P firewall protects confidential information from those who do not explicitly have authorized access to the information and protects your network and its resources from malicious users and accidents that originate outside of your network. The D2P server has a robust and secure firewall that prevents all the incoming traffic except those required for the organization. Moreover, it is pretty much flexible so that it can be modified as per the client requirement.
Advance Early Warning System
Each D2P server is integrated with a Advanced Early Warning System that keeps track of all the activity on the server around the clock and warns the D2P technical support of the various instances such as:
a) Disk Space
b) CPU Usage
c) Memory Usage
d) SPAM Flooding
e) Network Congestion
f) Large content upload/download
g) Peer-to-peer Network (torrents)
h) Open SMTP relay via worm/Trojan
i) Excess SMTP traffic (incoming/outgoing)
j) Brute-Force attack
a) Disk Space
b) CPU Usage
c) Memory Usage
d) SPAM Flooding
e) Network Congestion
f) Large content upload/download
g) Peer-to-peer Network (torrents)
h) Open SMTP relay via worm/Trojan
i) Excess SMTP traffic (incoming/outgoing)
j) Brute-Force attack


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