Network Security Risk Review. This report includes a proprietary Security Risk Score and chart showing the relative health (on a scale of 1 to 10) of the network security, along with a summary of the number of computers with issues. This powerful lead generation and sales development tool also reports on outbound protocols, System Control protocols, User Access Controls, as well as an external vulnerabilities summary list.
Network Security Management Plan. Network Management Plan This report will help prioritize issues based on the issue's risk score. A listing of all security related risks are provided along with recommended actions.
External Vulnerabilities Scan Detail Report. A comprehensive output including security holes and warnings, informational items that can help make better network security decisions, plus a full NMap Scan which checks all 65,535 ports and reports which are open. This is an essential item for many standard security compliance reports.
Outbound Security Report. Highlights deviation from industry standards compared to outbound port and protocol accessibility, lists available wireless networks as part of a wireless security survey, and provides information on Internet content accessibility.
Security Policy Assessment Report. A detailed overview of the security policies which are in place on both a domain wide and local machine basis.
Share Permission Report. Comprehensive lists of all network "shares" by computer, detailing which users and groups have access to which devices and files, and what level of access they have.
User Permissions Report. Organizes permissions by user, showing all shared computers and files to which they have access.
User Behavior Analysis Report. Shows all logins, successful and failure, by user. Report allows you to find service accounts which are not properly configured (and thus failing to login) as well as users who may be attempting (and possibly succeeding) in accessing resources (computers) which they should not be.
Login History by Computer Report. Same data as User Behavior but inverted to show you by computer. Quite useful, in particular, for looking at a commonly accessed machines (file server, domain controller, etc.) â or a particularly sensitive machine for failed login attempts. An example would be CEO's laptop â or the accounting computer where you want to be extra diligent in checking for users trying to get in.
Login Failures by Computer Report. Report identifies users who have succeeded in logging in to another machine. Great for auditing/logging purposes to know of all attempts.