Application Control, Application Whitelisting and Device Control Products

Application Control/Whitelisting
Control endpoints to ensure only explicitly trusted software is allowed to run; stop the Advanced Persistent Threat targeting your systems, prevent zero-day attacks and eliminate malware, viruses and unauthorized software.
Device Control
Allows you to approve or ban removable devices down to the serial number level. This protection is key to prevent data leakage and preventing unintentional or intentional direct loading of malware by both employees and guests of your physical location. Enforce read, write, and execute policies for both data and software on USB keys, and other such removable media. Limit the use of portable storage devices to an authorized set; for example, encrypted drives only.
File Integrity Monitoring
Ensure the integrity of configuration files. Monitor, control and report unauthorized change. Detect change when it occurs, lowering the administrative cost and burden and achieving PCI DSS compliance.
Registry Protection
Out-of-box polices secure high risk registry objects. Allows IT to define policies to protect specific registry entries.
Operating System Integrity
Provides operating system tamper protection.
Software Reputation Service
Provides categorization and risk and trust information for new, unknown software.
Threat Identification
Delivers complete visibility: live software inventory and reporting of all malware attempting to execute, including zero-day attacks and the Advanced Persistent Threat.
Memory protection rules to prevent a class of attacks that never reaches the disk and therefore don’t drop a payload. Parity secures IT defined critical processes from injection, termination, unauthorized manipulation of DEP.
File integrity monitoring and control continuously monitors, controls and reports on change to critical configuration files using Parity as a real time endpoint sensor. Benefits include compliance, accelerated incident response, APT detection.
Registry protection can allow authorized change by establishing trusted processes, users and updaters for those registry settings, while enforcing policy on un-authorized change. For example, if a change of the configuration of parity is attempted, it can be reported or prevented, while still allowing parity process itself to make changes.



