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managing electronic threats today, the
reality is, there are countless hackers
out there at this very instant with advanced
programs snooping around for unprotected
networks and computers connected to the
Internet. Once accessed, the hacker has
full control of your enterprise’s
confidential data or worse, he or she could
use your network as a base for launching
attacks on others.
The silver lining
in managing these unrelenting security
attacks and threats suggests that
the Internet has evolved since its advent
into an extremely pivotal arm of business
operations today. And when deployed in
its most efficient and secured state, it
could reciprocate into important business
dollars. Hence, the world of digital opportunities
awaits you once your enterprise aligns
itself with the today Internet’s
security demands.

Amnet understands the perpetual progression
of the level of threats your enterprises
faces in the endeavor of utilizing the
Internet to manage your daily operations.
And in that understanding, we are committed
to be in a partnership with your enterprise
to provide a framework of multi-layer security
to combat these threats and ensure a more
secure and safe environment. An environment
where your enterprise is able to maintain
a high level of techno efficiency without
any compromise.
Spam
The most common threats that most enterprises
face today include spam – unsolicited
mail. Apart from wasting the precious
time of employees, spam also takes up
a lot of network bandwidth that is crucial
to business operations.
In the fight against
spam, Amnet is proud to collaborate with
leading email security
vendors such as Symantec and IronPort to
provide power defense at the perimeter
of email-borne threats. Apart from denying
spam from entering your enterprise’s
network, the industrial strength defense
infrastructure of email security appliances
also addresses the preventive and reactive
security needs of organizations by delivering
in depth security that deals with email
threats consisting of false-positives,
denial of service attacks, directory harvest
attacks, and phishing.
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