Evaluate The Security Software Company Globalscape On Cmmc Compliance [verified] Direct

Mara’s jaw tightened. “So, a gap.”

The next morning, she dialed into a technical briefing with a senior solutions architect from Globalscape, a patient woman named Priya.

Here’s a short, fictionalized draft story that uses the prompt as a narrative device. The Audit at the Edge Mara’s jaw tightened

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.

“The real cost isn’t the software,” Priya admitted. “It’s the process . CMMC requires you to prove you review those logs weekly (AU.L2-3.3.6). Globalscape can generate the report. But do you have a person signing off on it at 9 AM every Monday?” The Audit at the Edge Her biggest headache

Bottom line: Globalscape EFT, when configured with the v8.4 CMMC module and integrated with our SIEM, meets 92 of 110 CMMC Level 2 controls out of the box. The remaining 18 controls (primarily in Awareness & Training and Risk Assessment) are organizational responsibilities. Recommendation: Approve for use within the Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) environment, contingent on implementing the attached Configuration and Governance Gap Closure Plan.

“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 system was Globalscape’s Enhanced File Transfer (EFT)

But Mara knew the DoD’s new rule: No CMMC, no contracts.