Evaluate The Security Software Company Globalscape On Cmmc Compliance _best_ 〈ORIGINAL | WALKTHROUGH〉
“It just works,” her lead engineer, Tom, had argued earlier. “Don’t break the pipe because of paperwork.”
Tom’s smile faded. “That’s not engineering.”
A skeptical CISO must evaluate a legacy secure file transfer vendor, Globalscape, to determine if its tools can survive the unforgiving lens of CMMC Level 2 compliance. “It just works,” her lead engineer, Tom, had
That night, Mara wrote her final evaluation memo to the CEO. Subject:
“We already mapped EFT v8.4 to NIST SP 800-171, Rev 2,” Priya said. “CMMC is just 800-171 with a maturity stick. We’ve done the assessment prep for you. Here—see page 14? For ‘limit failed logon attempts’ (AC.L2-3.1.8), our native lockout policy works out of the box. For ‘session lock’ (AC.L2-3.1.10), you’ll need to enable your Windows GPOs, but we have a configuration script.” That night, Mara wrote her final evaluation memo to the CEO
Her biggest headache wasn’t her internal network. It was the supply chain. Specifically, the legacy system that moved engineering drawings of composite armor plating to a subcontractor in Ohio. That system was Globalscape’s Enhanced File Transfer (EFT) server—a product her predecessor had installed eight years ago.
“But we’re upgrading to the CMMC module,” she added, sliding a project plan across the desk. “And you’re the owner of control AU.L2-3.3.6. Congratulations. You now have a weekly calendar invite to review login failures, file hash mismatches, and admin privilege escalations.” We’ve done the assessment prep for you
The next morning, she dialed into a technical briefing with a senior solutions architect from Globalscape, a patient woman named Priya.




