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OPEN SECURITY EXCHANGE
ANNOUNCES NEW MEMBERS
Updated
Membership Structure Results in
GE Infrastructure Joining
as a Management Board Member,
Deister Electronics
Becomes a General Member
PISCATAWAY, NJ — November 11,
2004 —The Open
Security Exchange (OSE), a
cross-industry consortium dedicated to delivering best practices
guidelines in
the area of security management and vendor-neutral interoperability
specifications for the integration of physical and cyber security
systems,
today announced two new members.
GE Infrastructure, Security joined
the Open Security Exchange as a Board Member. “We are pleased to join
and help lead an
organization that will define and promote
standards in our industry,
which will improve the overall value and experience of security
solutions for
our customers,” said Jim Clark, GE Security’s Vice President, Global
Marketing.
The recent organizational
changes in the OSE, which introduce two membership levels, and
guarantee an
equal level of participation for all OSE members, ensure that the OSE
will be a
robust and authoritative forum for industry-wide initiatives.”
Deister
Electronics joined the Open Security Exchange as a General Member.“As a
leading developer and manufacturer of
RFID
technology and equipment, Deister is at the forefront of developing
innovative OEM
solutions to address the most demanding client requirements,” said Bill
Nuffer
President of Deister Electronics USA. “The Open Security Exchange
provides a valuable
means for security
vendors to collaborate and provide pragmatic technical integration
solutions. OSE is now a major influence on
the growing
Open Standards movement in the Security Industry—an effort that
presages a
flowering of innovation in not only security but in the tightly coupled
markets
of Information Technology (IT) and Supply Chain Management.”
The Open
Security Exchange is a unique program designed to provide physical and
cyber
security vendors with a forum to allow the definition of vendor-neutral
technical interoperability specifications and the promotion of these
specifications to standard organizations. For example, The Open
Security Exchange has issued
the first of its kind
technical specifications for the convergence of physical and cyber
security
systems. These specifications, named
PHYSBITS, are publicly available and can be downloaded from the Open
Security
Exchange’s website at http://www.opensecurityexchange.org/resources.html.
Organizations
who wish to join the Open Security Exchange can find membership
information on
the OSE website at http://www.opensecurityexchange.org/join.html
or can request more information by sending an e-mail to info@opensecurityexchange.org
About Open
Security Exchange
The Open
Security Exchange, a program of IEEE-ISTO, was created to address
today’s most
significant security challenge — the lack of integration between
various
components of the security infrastructure. The Open Security Exchange
is a
cross-industry forum dedicated to delivering vendor-neutral
interoperability
specifications and best practices guidelines in the area of security
management. This enables organizations to more efficiently mitigate
risk,
optimize their security postures and enforce privacy policies.
The Open Security Exchange combines
the disparate
technologies that form today’s security infrastructures, allowing for
optimal
security and operational efficiencies while respecting
organization-specific
operational requirements. Effective security management will result in:
accurate detection of threats and attacks; consistent definition and
enforcement
of security policies; and enhanced organizational collaboration.
Current Board members of OSE are Computer
Associates,
CoreStreet, Fargo, Gemplus, HID Corp., Software House, Siemens Building
Technologies, Siemens ICN, Sony Electronics, Inc., and VistaScape.
Deister
Electronics is a General member.
http://www.opensecurityexchange.org
Contact
Greg Kohn
Program Manager
Open Security Exchange
+1 732 465 6471
info@opensecurityexchange.org
www.opensecurityexchange.org
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