New FISMA Information Assurance Tool - xbasics Ulinzi

New FISMA Information Assurance Tool - xbasics Ulinzi

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Subject Author Date
New FISMA Information Assurance Tool - xbasics Ulinzi eeajam 05-16-2008
Posted by on May 16, 2008, 7:07 am
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xbasics Ulinzi is a new Information Assurance tool focusing
exclusively on FISMA. It implements the first two major steps needed
to be accomplished for any successful FISMA Information Assurance
effort: the Security Categorization of a given information system and
the analysis and development of a compliant set of Security Controls
for it. It is this effort that has gotten so many federal agencies
and contractors in trouble so many times, and yet this work continues
year after year implemented in the same manner. xbasics Ulinzi was
designed to change this.

xbasics Ulinzi is a new type of tool built from the ground up to
simplify, speed up and help users of all skill levels produce a
compliant set of FISMA Security Controls. It is a direct
implementation of all the corresponding NIST-developed standards and
guidelines, and therefore it not only contains all the data provided
in the NIST documents inside of it, but it also helps users implement
this effort as NIST intended. But this is just the tip of the
iceberg...

For more information visit, http://xbasics.com/products/

Posted by David H. Lipman on May 16, 2008, 4:17 pm
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| xbasics Ulinzi is a new Information Assurance tool focusing
| exclusively on FISMA. It implements the first two major steps needed
| to be accomplished for any successful FISMA Information Assurance
| effort: the Security Categorization of a given information system and
| the analysis and development of a compliant set of Security Controls
| for it. It is this effort that has gotten so many federal agencies
| and contractors in trouble so many times, and yet this work continues
| year after year implemented in the same manner. xbasics Ulinzi was
| designed to change this.

| xbasics Ulinzi is a new type of tool built from the ground up to
| simplify, speed up and help users of all skill levels produce a
| compliant set of FISMA Security Controls. It is a direct
| implementation of all the corresponding NIST-developed standards and
| guidelines, and therefore it not only contains all the data provided
| in the NIST documents inside of it, but it also helps users implement
| this effort as NIST intended. But this is just the tip of the
| iceberg...

Since it was spammed it should be AVOIDED !


--
Dave
http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
Multi-AV - http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp



Posted by on May 19, 2008, 7:17 pm
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>
> Since it was spammed it should be AVOIDED !
>

Hi Dave! Could you be a little bit more explicit as to how do you
*magically* believe this tool was spammed? Based on what real
fact(s)? This is probably one of the most secure tools around, so I
would love to find out where you got your data from!



Posted by David H. Lipman on May 19, 2008, 7:32 pm
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| Hi Dave! Could you be a little bit more explicit as to how do you
| *magically* believe this tool was spammed? Based on what real
| fact(s)? This is probably one of the most secure tools around, so I
| would love to find out where you got your data from!

Your spam post using a GMail account through Google Groups.


--
Dave
http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
Multi-AV - http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp



Posted by on May 19, 2008, 7:58 pm
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wrote:
>
> | Hi Dave! =A0Could you be a little bit more explicit as to how do you
> | *magically* believe this tool was spammed? =A0Based on what real
> | fact(s)? =A0This is probably one of the most secure tools around, so I
> | would love to find out where you got your data from!
>
> Your spam post using a GMail account through Google Groups.
>
> --
> Davehttp://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
> Multi-AV -http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp

In other words, there's no basis for the original statement. It's
just plain old FUD!



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