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Volume 3, Number 35 -- September 21, 2006

IBM, Sun Add Encryption to High-End Tape Drives

Published: September 21, 2006

by Alex Woodie

IBM last week announced new versions of the System Storage TS1120 tape drive that encrypts data as it is written to tape, preventing data from being read if the tape is lost or stolen. The announcement of the new drive, which supports all major platforms including 5/OS, was immediately followed by Sun Microsystems' introduction of its own new tape encryption solution, called the StorageTek Crypto-Ready T10000.

Every week, it seems, there are new reports of companies, schools, or government departments losing vital data on its customers or users, thereby putting them at risk of identity theft. In fact, in the last year and a half, 90 million U.S. consumers have had their personal data inadvertently exposed. In some of these cases, lost or stolen tapes are to blame.

IBM is addressing this growing problem with its high-end tape drive, the TS1120, which is a version of the 3592 drives (formerly called "Magstar") that IBM has been selling for about a year. IBM will be including the new encryption capability with new drives, and offering it as an upgrade option to customers who previously purchased the drives.

IBM provides three encryption methods with the TS1120, including application-, system-, and library-level encryption. For system- or library-managed encryption, key management is handled with IBM's Java-based Encryption Key Manager software, which is actually included in its Java Virtual Machine distributions. This software can manage encryption of data coming from i5/OS, z/OS, AIX, HP-UX, Solaris, Linux, and Windows operating systems. For application-level encryption, IBM's Tivoli Storage Manager storage is used to generate and communicate encryption keys to the TS1120 drives.

New TS1120 drives start at $35,500 and support up to 500 GB of data per tape. The drives can be used by themselves, or attached to the TS3500 Tape Library, TS1120 Tape Controller Model C06, the 3592 Tape Controller Model J70, 3494 Tape Libraries, or C20 Silo Attach frame. They can also be used with certain Sun StorageTek libraries.

Sun's StorageTek division, which has been emulating IBM's Magstar drives for years, also introduced an encryption solution, the Sun StorageTek Crypto-Ready T10000 drive, a 500 GB drive based on existing T10000 technology. However, Sun's new Crypto-Ready drives, which start at about $37,000.



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TABLE OF CONTENTS
SGI Kills Off Irix Unix and MIPS Machines, At Long Last

Solaris 10 with Trusted Extensions Readied for 11/06 Update

IBM, Sun Add Encryption to High-End Tape Drives

As I See It: The Incredible Shrinking Vacation

But Wait, There's More:


AIX Partitioning Enhancements Pushed Out to Power6 Launch . . . Verizon Business Adds Hosting Support for AIX and HP-UX . . . Infor Tells Channel Partners to Focus on Infor Products . . . Manufacturers Don't Use Most of Their ERP Software's Features, Says Aberdeen . . . IDC Says Storage Software Sales Driven by Replication . . . Dutkowsky Steps Down as Egenera CEO, Moves to Tech Data . . .

The Unix Guardian

BACK ISSUES

The Four Hundred
Project Prometheus Unchained as iSociety

IBM Offers Incentives on i5 iSCSI Links to BladeCenter Blade Boxes

The Disk Drive at 50: Still Spinning

As I See It: The Incredible Shrinking Vacation

The Linux Beacon
Red Hat Launches Integrated Linux-JBoss Software Stack

IBM Delivers Promised Linux-Based Cell Blade Server

The Disk Drive at 50: Still Spinning

As I See It: The Incredible Shrinking Vacation

Big Iron
IBM, Sun Add Encryption to High-End Tape Drives

Top Mainframe Stories and Vendor Announcements

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

The Windows Observer
Bang for the Buck: Windows Fights Two Front War with Unix and Linux

Dell and Symantec Team for 'Secure Exchange' Solution

Microsoft Ramping Up the Vista Propaganda Engine

HP Completes Montecito Itanium Rollout into Integrity Servers


 
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