Mocana Announces Support for IKEv2, EAP-IKEv2, and MOBIKE Protocols.Mocana Addresses Emerging Security Requirements for Next Generation Wireless Devices and Services SAN FRANCISCO -- Mocana, a software company that is enabling a secure networked society, today announced that its Embedded IPsec/IKE solution now fully supports IKEv2, the most recent version of the Internet Key Exchange Internet key exchange (IKE) is the protocol used to set up a security association (SA) in the IPsec protocol suite. Overview IKE is defined in RFC 2407, RFC 2408 and RFC 2409. IKEv2 is defined in RFC 4306. protocol which is used to negotiate a Security Association at the outset of an IPsec session. By increasing the breadth of its product line to include the support of IKEv2, Mocana is ensuring that the most current security standards are being met and is demonstrating Mocana's commitment to upholding the highest levels of security. "Many industries are standardizing on IKEv2 and will require vendors to support the protocol," said Adrian Turner, chief executive officer and president of Mocana. "Mocana's Embedded IPsec/IKEv2 is just another example of how Mocana is striving to provide customers with solutions that are completely scalable and that meet the most current security standards." Next generation wireless and mobility standards have formalized IKEv2 as its Key Exchange protocol. IKEv2 is ideally suited for processor and bandwidth-constrained wireless devices like dual mode VoIP/WiFi handsets, by reducing connection latency, processing, and by providing DoS (denial of service A condition in which a system can no longer respond to normal requests. See denial of service attack. ) protection. With the release of IKEv2, Mocana provides a complete Device Security Framework for next generation mobile devices. Now, device manufacturers can build FMC See fixed mobile convergence. , IMS (1) See IP Multimedia Subsystem. (2) (Information Management System) An early IBM hierarchical DBMS for IBM mainframes. IMS was widely implemented throughout the 1970s under MVS and continues to be used under z/OS. , 3GPP and UMA devices using Mocana's integrated IPSec/IKEv2 and EAP solution containing EAP-SIM EAP-SIM Extensible Authentication Protocol method for GSM Subscriber Identity Modules , EAP-AKA EAP-AKA Extensible Authentication Protocol - Authentication and Key Agreement , EAP-IKEv2. Mocana IPsec/IKEv2 is one component of Mocana's Device Security Framework, which is made up of several embeddable components that OEMs and providers of internet-based services can leverage to secure next generation devices and services. Extensible, suited to work with single and multi-core processors, and able to leverage hardware acceleration, Mocana's Device Security Framework offers high levels of scalability and performance with an extremely small footprint. Mocana's Embedded IPsec/IKEv2 solution also supports the MOBIKE (IKEv2 Mobility & Multihoming) protocol which is an extension of IKEv2. This extension allows for efficient management of the re-establishment of Security Associations when the IP address of an IPsec host changes during a session. In a mobility scenario, an IP address on an IPsec host is changed multiple times during one IPsec session. The MOBIKE protocol provides specifications to handle these changes efficiently. Mocana's Embedded IPsec/IKEv2 solution conforms to RFC-4306 (Internet Key Exchange IKEv2 Protocol) and also supports EAP-IKEv2 (Extensible Authentication Protocol Extensible Authentication Protocol, or EAP, is a universal authentication framework frequently used in wireless networks and Point-to-Point connections. It is defined by RFC 3748. ), which provides mutual authentication and session key establishment between the EAP peer and the EAP server. Mocana's implementation of this method conforms to the latest Internet Engineering Task Force (c/o Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI), Reston, VA, www.ietf.org) Founded in 1986, the IETF is a non-membership, open, voluntary standards organization dedicated to identifying problems and opportunities in IP data networks and proposing technical solutions to the (IETF See Internet Engineering Task Force. IETF - Internet Engineering Task Force ) draft. About Mocana Mocana is an infrastructure software company securely enabling Internet scale products and IP based services that leverage device connectivity. Mocana's industry-leading infrastructure software solutions ensure that wired and wireless devices, networks and services perform and scale with the utmost security - a necessary foundation for a networked society. Customers include Philips, Dell, Cisco, Avaya, Nortel Networks, Harris, Honeywell, Symbol, Emulex, Net.com and Radvision, among others. Mocana was founded in 2002, is privately-held, and headquartered in San Francisco, California “San Francisco” redirects here. For other uses, see San Francisco (disambiguation). The City and County of San Francisco (EN IPA: [sænfrənˈsɪskoʊ] . For more information, visit www.mocana.com. To request a free full source code and documentation evaluation of Mocana's security solutions, visit www.mocana.com/evaluate.html |
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