Skip to main content

virual private network

Virtual Private Network (VPN)


Data privacy is considered to be one of the most crucial aspects of securing the data over the network. Data privacy, is also known as Information Privacy. It is a part or subsidiary of information technology, which deals with the abilities of organisation or individual to determine the type of data to be shared on a computer system with the third parties.
Virtual Private Network (VPN) is one more important feature of data privacy. VPN plays a major role in protecting the privacy of data and communication channel on the network. Data privacy describes VPN techniques to keep the data safe on the network.
Internet Protocol Security VPN (IPsec VPN): IP Sec defines a private communication channel in order to support secured business operations on the network. IP Sec fulfils the dream of sending information through the secured channel to remote servers anytime/anywhere to any recipient across the work.

• Dynamic Multipoint VPN: 

Dynamic Multipoint VPN (DM-VPN) is a Cisco IOS solution used for building flexible IPsec Virtual Private Networks (VPNs). DM-VPN is involved in setting multiple private secured channels among different VPNs in the network.

• Group Encrypted Transport VPN (GET VPN): 

GET VPN helps in setting up group of secured channels between different VPN`s in the network. GET VPN helps in defining Regulatory compliance as the basic security need of any enterprise.

• Secure Socket Layer VPN (SSL VPN):

 A Secure Sockets Layer Virtual Private Network (SSL VPN) is a type of VPN, which is used with a standard web browser. SSL VPN is used to provide remote users with the access to applications and internal network connections.

• Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS VPN):

 MPLS VPN is about defining various private secured channels on VPN using MPLS technology. MPLS is a technology that speeds up the movement of packets between sources to destination points in the network.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Special Permissions in linux

The setuid permission on an executable file means that the command will run as the user owning the file, not as the user that ran the command. One example is the passwd command: [student@desktopX ~]$ ls -l /usr/bin/passwd -rw s r-xr-x. 1 root root 35504 Jul 16 2010 /usr/bin/passwd In a long listing, you can spot the setuid permissions by a lowercase s where you would normally expect the x (owner execute permissions) to be. If the owner does not have execute permissions, this will be replaced by an uppercase S . The special permission setgid on a directory means that files created in the directory will inherit their group ownership from the directory, rather than inheriting it from the creating user. This is commonly used on group collaborative directories to automatically change a file from the default private group to the shared group, or if files in a directory should be

The Seven-Step Model of Migration

Irrespective of the migration approach adopted, the Seven-step Model of Cloud Migration creates a more rational point of view towards the migration process and offers the ability to imbibe several best practices throughout the journey Step 1: Assess Cloud migration assessments are conducted to understand the complexities in the migration process at the code, design and architectural levels. The investment and the recurring costs are also evaluated along with gauging the tools, test cases, functionalities and other features related to the configuration. Step 2: Isolate The applications to be migrated to the cloud from the internal data center are freed of dependencies pertaining to the environment and the existing system. This step cuts a clearer picture about the complexity of the migration process. Step 3: Map Most organisations hold a detailed mapping of their environment with all the systems and applications. This information can be used to distinguish between the

RequestsDependencyWarning: urllib3 (1.24.1) or chardet (3.0.4) doesn't match a supported version

import tweepy /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/requests/__init__.py:80: RequestsDependencyWarning: urllib3 (1.24.1) or chardet (3.0.4) doesn't match a supported version!   RequestsDependencyWarning) Traceback (most recent call last):   File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>   File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/tweepy/__init__.py", line 14, in <module>     from tweepy.api import API   File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/tweepy/api.py", line 12, in <module>     from tweepy.binder import bind_api   File "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/tweepy/binder.py", line 11, in <module>     import requests   File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/requests/__init__.py", line 97, in <module>     from . import utils   File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/requests/utils.py", line 26, in <module>     from ._internal_utils import to_native_string   File "/usr/lib/python2.

tag