Sarbanes-Oxley: Transactions and records protected with BOUNCER by CoreTrace
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (commonly called SOX or Sarbox) has deep and far-reaching implications for any publicly traded enterprise. It specifies the usage of internal control frameworks and many other safeguards to ensure the integrity of transactions and records.
Penalties for violation of SOX can be stiff, including up to 20 years in prison, and no distinction is made for violations that might be due to an external cyber-criminal invading your protected networks. Your enterprise is held responsible for the actions of those outside it, making endpoint security one of your key priorities.
BOUNCER application whitelisting circumvents the shortcomings of traditional antivirus software blacklisting methodologies. Rather than try to keep up with the exponentially growing list of threats to your protected data, BOUNCER takes a simpler, more effective, less time-intensive approach. If a piece of code attempts to execute and it is not on the list of approved applications, it does not run. How that code got into your endpoint is immaterial — it will not be able to compromise your transaction records, and your compliance with SOX is secure.