This post is also available in: 日本語 (Japanese)
I’m thrilled to announce that Palo Alto Networks Prisma Access and Cortex Data Lake are now fully compatible with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) Cloud Log Aggregation Warehouse (CLAW). Working with CISA, Palo Alto Networks created an onboarding service to forward logs and telemetry from Cortex Data Lake securely to CLAW. This capability enables departments and agencies using Cortex Data Lake to participate in EINSTEIN by sending telemetry to CLAW.
CLAW is a CISA-deployed architecture for collecting and aggregating security telemetry data from agencies using commercial services from cloud services providers. It’s meant to enable secure, efficient methods for processing cloud security data in a way that offers CISA a similar level of situational awareness, provided by its current National Cybersecurity Protections System (NCPS) EINSTEIN, on-premises deployments.
The EINSTEIN system is designed to detect and block cyberattacks from compromising federal agencies, and it provides CISA with the situational awareness to use threat information detected in one agency to protect the rest of the government and help protect the private sector, too.
Palo Alto Networks CLAW forwarding capability provides rapid onboarding as agencies begin moving to approved cloud-based TIC solutions. And, if you implement Prisma Access, you’ll get the added benefit of using the only Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) 2.0 solution currently available on the market.
Palo Alto Networks pioneered and recently introduced ZTNA 2.0. ZTNA 2.0 addresses the deficiencies of legacy ZTNA approaches for securing remote and hybrid workforces by connecting all users and apps with fine-grained access controls and providing behavior-based continuous trust verification after users connect. This reduces the attack surface dramatically. ZTNA 2.0 can also make the transition to a broader Zero Trust architecture easier. (Read more about ZTNA in the public sector.)
For federal civilian departments and agencies, our established CLAW forwarding capability means you have several capabilities:
According to CISA, when agencies move toward TIC 3.0 use cases, some network traffic no longer traverses traditional NCPS sensors, which means security information about that traffic is no longer captured by NCPS. Traditional NCPS sensors, located at TIC and Managed Trusted Internet Protocol Service (MTIPS) gateways, capture security information as traffic passes between the agency and the internet.
With a secure connection between Palo Alto Networks Cortex Data Lake and CLAW, federal civilian departments and agencies can send telemetry directly to CLAW through Prisma Access. The Cortex Data Lake, which provides cloud-based, centralized log storage and aggregation for Prisma Access, collects, transforms and analyzes enterprise data, and then pushes log data to CLAW from cloud services.
Palo Alto Networks Prisma Access is part of a suite of FedRAMP Authorized, cloud-delivered services that are helping U.S. agencies modernize IT and cybersecurity. Find out how this solution and our other FedRAMP Authorized cloud services, including Cortex Data Lake, can help federal civilian departments and agencies secure their networks and remote and hybrid workforces. Or contact our federal team to request a meeting.
Also, be sure to visit our Zero Trust for public sector page to learn how Palo Alto Networks is helping organizations in the public sector to accelerate their Zero Trust journey.
By submitting this form, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge our Privacy Statement. Please look for a confirmation email from us. If you don't receive it in the next 10 minutes, please check your spam folder.