which of the following is not a firewalls vendor course hero
by Ottilie Jast
Published 2 years ago
Updated 1 year ago
7 min read
Why Is a Next-Generation Firewall Crucial?
Traditional firewalls were designed in an age where cyber threats could be thwarted by mere stateful inspection of network traffic. These days, attackers are clever enough to exploit various unknown vulnerabilities and malicious enough to unleash threats like ransomware, application-layer attacks, and fileless malware.
How Much Does a Firewall Cost?
For a small or home office firewall solution, users can expect to spend between $500 and $1,000. That said, depending on the needs of the organization, pricing can get into the tens of thousands. Generally speaking, buyers should expect to spend $1,000+ for a battle-tested, TAA-compliant firewall like Fortinet that can hold its own against advanced threats.
What Are Network Firewalls?
By following a set of rules with specific parameters (e.g., protocol, port number, IP address) for either permitting, restricting, or blocking access, a network firewall enables safe communication to occur from the internal network to the outside world and vice versa.
In contrast, next-generation firewalls (NGFW) offer advanced capabilities such as deep packet inspection (DPI) and application-level visibility, as well as the integration of cloud-based threat intelligence from outside the firewall. Though no industry-wide definition exists, NGFWs are best described by Gartner as: "... deep-packet inspection firewalls that move beyond port/protocol ins…
NGFWs are critical for protecting against these new threat types, providing more than just inspection and blocking but also intrusion detection and prevention, crowdsourced threat intelligence, artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)-based anomaly detection, and more.
It's worth noting that future (and some current) cyber threats will invariably leverage AI/ML to a greater or lesser degree. To counter this, many NGFW vendors have also incorporated AI/ML in their solutions. For example, Fortinet has developed FortiAI, a self-learning AI for security operations, available as an on-premises hardware appliance or virtual machine. Juniper ATP—int…