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By Robert Lemos
Posted on ZDNet News: Feb 24, 2004 8:10:00 PM

SAN FRANCISCO--Microsoft on Tuesday showed off a forthcoming update to Windows designed to make the operating system more secure and proposed a caller ID-like system for e-mail that could help curtail the growing spam problem.

Speaking at the RSA Conference here, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates previewed several new features that will be added to Windows XP as part of a major midyear update to the OS. Among the enhancements that will be part of Service Pack 2 will be an expanded firewall and a pop-up ad blocker within Internet Explorer.

News.context

What's new:
At the RSA conference, Microsoft details several ways it intends to improve security on PCs and to thwart spam.

Bottom line:
Some of the improvements will appear in an update to Windows XP that is expected to be available by June. Whether it mollifies critics of Microsoft's much-maligned OS remains to be seen.

For more info:
Track the players

The company also showed publicly for the first time the Windows Security Center, a dashboard within Windows XP and a part of SP2 that will serve as a centralized place to view security settings and get advice on how to remedy PC vulnerabilities.

"SP2 is a release that is entirely focused on security," Gates said. While Microsoft is working on a more major update to Windows, code-named Longhorn, the company wanted to issue a release for XP that could improve security in the near term, he said. "We prioritized the resources and activities around an intermediate release that is very security oriented," Gates said.

Gates said Service Pack 2 should be available in the first half of the year. The company has been beta testing the software since late last year.

The added security features will arrive more than two years after Gates launched the company's Trustworthy Computing Initiative. While the initiative has garnered a varied response from security experts, Gates said that the company is making progress. Microsoft is spending more than $6 billion on research and development this year, with the largest portion going to security, he said.

"Microsoft is putting forward some ideas and they seem willing to put them into production," said Michael Cherry, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, who recently authored a report on the Trustworthy Computing Initiative. However, "it is critical that they deliver on these (plans)," he said.

While Cherry gave Microsoft high marks for Tuesday's announcement, he said the company has yet to make good on a plan, discussed last year, to commercially release several code-checking tools used by Microsoft's in-house programmers. The tools could help developers catch errors in code that could lead to security breaches.

"One of the things that Gates promised is that those tools will be in Whidbey (code-name for the next version of the Visual Studio.Net development tool bundle). Those have been promised for a long time. I'm not sure why they're not available," he said.

Moreover, Gates argued that the company has reduced the vulnerability of Windows computers. In the first 300 days, Microsoft Windows Server 2003 had only eight vulnerabilities ranked critical or important, while Windows 2000 had 38.

"Everything we are doing has been impacted" by security concerns, Gates said. "It's not a case of simply fixing a few vulnerabilities and moving on."

Click here to Play

Bill Gates, chairman, Microsoft

The features in SP2 largely continue Microsoft down the path it has been heading. For example, the inclusion of a firewall is not new to Windows, though Microsoft is trying to make the software more usable. The company expanded the capabilities of its basic Internet Connection Firewall and renamed the integrated software Windows Firewall. Where the original security application just closed possible points of entry, the new firewall will also prevent applications from contacting the Internet unless given express permission to do so by the user.

Other fundamental changes in Windows will be the addition of an integrated pop-up ad blocker for Internet Explorer, a feature included in many alternative browsers, such as Mozilla. The feature will allow users to block all pop-up ads, none or to ask permission each time an ad tries to appear.

On the spam front, Gates outlined a caller ID-like system designed to root out unwanted e-mail by verifying the address of the sender. Microsoft said it would include the technology as part of Exchange Edge Services, an update to its Exchange Server 2003 e-mail software.

Calling spam the leading problem with e-mail, Microsoft said it was launching a long-term effort designed to help the industry fight back. The program, dubbed the Coordinated Spam Reduction Initiative, includes the caller ID plan as well as other methods to create policies for legitimate bulk e-mail.

Microsoft also previewed technology to detect software that appears to be exhibiting malicious behavior. The company showed off a feature that will control the downloading of ActiveX components, an interactive feature of Internet Explorer that security experts have long criticized as being insecure. Like the pop-up blocker, the feature will allow the user to control whether the components are downloaded and displayed, blocked or require permission for each instance.


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Enterprise security
Get the latest headlines and
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Other software makers weren't so impressed with Microsoft's efforts.

Fred Felman, vice president of marketing for Zone Labs, one of the leading makers of firewall software, said the firewall components added to Windows XP are broad tools that don't distinguish between different types of Internet activities or network privileges.

"Microsoft would be doing them a vast disservice in representing this (to be) enough protection for their users, but they seem to be willing to take that risk," he said. "I think it's going to take Microsoft a good three or four years to provide the level of security their users will demand."

Microsoft seems to be taking on Zone Labs and other firewall makers in the home and business market. Gates said Windows Firewall and other security features also have the ability to be managed using policy settings in Microsoft's ActiveDirectory server. That sort of central management has previously given the edge to Zone Labs, Symantec and other companies.

Ryan McGee, director of product marketing for security company Network Associates' McAfee division, said the Windows XP enhancements won't replace third-party firewalls such as McAfee's but will instead add an extra level of protection.

"The additional help of a protective technology built into Windows gives a very good base for us to build on," he said. "But there are so many pieces required to get good security in place that the one piece that gets added into XP won't be the whole pie."

Another feature that can be remotely managed is Microsoft's "active protection technology" that the company says will block software from performing certain activities that could be considered malicious. Such technology attempts to screen out hostile behavior by an application and can also limit the amount of access a computer has on a network if it has not been updated with the latest patch.

"We want to make computers resilient to viruses and attacks," Gates said.

Gates also reiterated Microsoft's assertions that the recent leak of Windows source code didn't come from a breach of the company's network or from a participant of the shared-source initiative. Microsoft has given source code to the governments of more than 30 countries, including China, Russia and Japan, as part of its shared source program.

"We are very committed to the shared-source initiative," he said.

CNET News.com's David Becker and Mike Ricciuti contributed to this report. SAN FRANCISCO--Microsoft on Tuesday showed off a forthcoming update to Windows designed to make the operating system more secure and proposed a caller ID-like system for e-mail that could help curtail the growing spam problem.

Speaking at the RSA Conference here, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates previewed several new features that will be added to Windows XP as part of a major midyear update to the OS. Among the enhancements that will be part of Service Pack 2 will be an expanded firewall and a pop-up ad blocker within Internet Explorer.

News.context

What's new:
At the RSA conference, Microsoft details several ways it intends to improve security on PCs and to thwart spam.

Bottom line:
Some of the improvements will appear in an update to Windows XP that is expected to be available by June. Whether it mollifies critics of Microsoft's much-maligned OS remains to be seen.

For more info:
Track the players

The company also showed publicly for the first time the Windows Security Center, a dashboard within Windows XP and a part of SP2 that will serve as a centralized place to view security settings and get advice on how to remedy PC vulnerabilities.

"SP2 is a release that is entirely focused on security," Gates said. While Microsoft is working on a more major update to Windows, code-named Longhorn, the company wanted to issue a release for XP that could improve security in the near term, he said. "We prioritized the resources and activities around an intermediate release that is very security oriented," Gates said.

Gates said Service Pack 2 should be available in the first half of the year. The company has been beta testing the software since late last year.

The added security features will arrive more than two years after Gates launched the company's Trustworthy Computing Initiative. While the initiative has garnered a varied response from security experts, Gates said that the company is making progress. Microsoft is spending more than $6 billion on research and development this year, with the largest portion going to security, he said.

"Microsoft is putting forward some ideas and they seem willing to put them into production," said Michael Cherry, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, who recently authored a report on the Trustworthy Computing Initiative. However, "it is critical that they deliver on these (plans)," he said.

While Cherry gave Microsoft high marks for Tuesday's announcement, he said the company has yet to make good on a plan, discussed last year, to commercially release several code-checking tools used by Microsoft's in-house programmers. The tools could help developers catch errors in code that could lead to security breaches.

"One of the things that Gates promised is that those tools will be in Whidbey (code-name for the next version of the Visual Studio.Net development tool bundle). Those have been promised for a long time. I'm not sure why they're not available," he said.

Moreover, Gates argued that the company has reduced the vulnerability of Windows computers. In the first 300 days, Microsoft Windows Server 2003 had only eight vulnerabilities ranked critical or important, while Windows 2000 had 38.

"Everything we are doing has been impacted" by security concerns, Gates said. "It's not a case of simply fixing a few vulnerabilities and moving on."

Click here to Play

Bill Gates, chairman, Microsoft

The features in SP2 largely continue Microsoft down the path it has been heading. For example, the inclusion of a firewall is not new to Windows, though Microsoft is trying to make the software more usable. The company expanded the capabilities of its basic Internet Connection Firewall and renamed the integrated software Windows Firewall. Where the original security application just closed possible points of entry, the new firewall will also prevent applications from contacting the Internet unless given express permission to do so by the user.

Other fundamental changes in Windows will be the addition of an integrated pop-up ad blocker for Internet Explorer, a feature included in many alternative browsers, such as Mozilla. The feature will allow users to block all pop-up ads, none or to ask permission each time an ad tries to appear.

On the spam front, Gates outlined a caller ID-like system designed to root out unwanted e-mail by verifying the address of the sender. Microsoft said it would include the technology as part of Exchange Edge Services, an update to its Exchange Server 2003 e-mail software.

Calling spam the leading problem with e-mail, Microsoft said it was launching a long-term effort designed to help the industry fight back. The program, dubbed the Coordinated Spam Reduction Initiative, includes the caller ID plan as well as other methods to create policies for legitimate bulk e-mail.

Microsoft also previewed technology to detect software that appears to be exhibiting malicious behavior. The company showed off a feature that will control the downloading of ActiveX components, an interactive feature of Internet Explorer that security experts have long criticized as being insecure. Like the pop-up blocker, the feature will allow the user to control whether the components are downloaded and displayed, blocked or require permission for each instance.


Get Up to Speed on...
Enterprise security
Get the latest headlines and
company-specific news in our
expanded GUTS section.


Other software makers weren't so impressed with Microsoft's efforts.

Fred Felman, vice president of marketing for Zone Labs, one of the leading makers of firewall software, said the firewall components added to Windows XP are broad tools that don't distinguish between different types of Internet activities or network privileges.

"Microsoft would be doing them a vast disservice in representing this (to be) enough protection for their users, but they seem to be willing to take that risk," he said. "I think it's going to take Microsoft a good three or four years to provide the level of security their users will demand."

Microsoft seems to be taking on Zone Labs and other firewall makers in the home and business market. Gates said Windows Firewall and other security features also have the ability to be managed using policy settings in Microsoft's ActiveDirectory server. That sort of central management has previously given the edge to Zone Labs, Symantec and other companies.

Ryan McGee, director of product marketing for security company Network Associates' McAfee division, said the Windows XP enhancements won't replace third-party firewalls such as McAfee's but will instead add an extra level of protection.

"The additional help of a protective technology built into Windows gives a very good base for us to build on," he said. "But there are so many pieces required to get good security in place that the one piece that gets added into XP won't be the whole pie."

Another feature that can be remotely managed is Microsoft's "active protection technology" that the company says will block software from performing certain activities that could be considered malicious. Such technology attempts to screen out hostile behavior by an application and can also limit the amount of access a computer has on a network if it has not been updated with the latest patch.

"We want to make computers resilient to viruses and attacks," Gates said.

Gates also reiterated Microsoft's assertions that the recent leak of Windows source code didn't come from a breach of the company's network or from a participant of the shared-source initiative. Microsoft has given source code to the governments of more than 30 countries, including China, Russia and Japan, as part of its shared source program.

"We are very committed to the shared-source initiative," he said.

CNET News.com's David Becker and Mike Ricciuti contributed to this report.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 73 Talkback(s)
It's not about security settings!
Attacks are not succeeding because of any security settings. The problem is that XP is full of security flaws. No amount of settings can fix that. Most qualified Tech's can secure a desktop or even ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: bjbrock Posted on: 03/19/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
As if he'd ever mention these things if not for 9/11 and linux  Bobby Sskcat | 02/24/04
Your wrong.  Heatlesssun | 02/24/04
Bwahahahahaha!! That was great!!  Bobby Sskcat | 02/24/04
Actually they ARE responding to their customers...  Michael Kelly | 02/24/04
So 6 months to fix major security hole is too long?  Xunil_Sierutuf | 02/24/04
It is naive  michael-t | 02/24/04
Actually MS responds very quickly to customer demands  voska | 02/24/04
It's a sense of balance  StorageGuru | 02/24/04
sense of balance  B_HI | 02/24/04
They are getting it, just on time?  Jay Cash | 02/24/04
MS attitude  michael-t | 02/24/04
It has seems to me that...  DragonBRockin | 02/25/04
The one main reason I want Linux to do well  jfrankcarr | 02/25/04
Very close to my views  IT_User | 02/25/04
Let put a brick wall around a straw-house  MAC_95NTXP | 02/24/04
How about something to stop users from...  Jomo_z | 02/24/04
That was provided some time ago  jfrankcarr | 02/24/04
How About....  DragonBRockin | 02/25/04
I bet that the  michael-t | 02/24/04
What about home users?  Rodney Davis | 02/24/04
there is the beginings of a tools  !Cartman! | 02/24/04
More spaghetti with meatballs.  michael-t | 02/24/04
Personal computers are personal  StorageGuru | 02/24/04
Just as long as you keep it off the network  Jay Cash | 02/24/04
Obfuscated security for the  michael-t | 02/24/04
Personal computers are personal  B_HI | 02/24/04
"Caution - MS Operating System Detected"  issthatso | 02/24/04
Noticed you mention "NEED"  voska | 02/24/04
Issthatso?  StorageGuru | 02/24/04
overwhelming success  B_HI | 02/24/04
Only the one way to measure it  StorageGuru | 02/24/04
Run along 'StorageBoy'  FreeBSD | 02/24/04
ATTN: ZDNET DEVELOPERS  FreeBSD | 02/24/04
Only the one way to measure it?: StorageMan  B_HI | 02/24/04
And you're basing your prediction on...  Jay Cash | 02/24/04
Success...  IT_User | 02/24/04
Success...  seosamh_z | 02/25/04
Success...  IT_User | 02/25/04
Success...  seosamh_z | 02/25/04
Bill Gates, Windows and Security in the same sentence..  B_HI | 02/24/04
The joke may be on you!  StorageGuru | 02/24/04
Not on me  B_HI | 02/24/04
But how long is that going to take?  Jay Cash | 02/24/04
A world where Windows is secure?!?  mds_z | 02/25/04
WindowsXP Dashboard?  B_HI | 02/24/04
If they were serious you could remove unwanted appolicaions.  DonnieBoy | 02/24/04
re : If they were serious you could remove unwanted appolicaions.  V Sanders | 02/24/04
If they were COMPETENT you could remove unwanted applications  IT_User | 02/24/04
Well actually all they removed was easy access to IE  MikeHerIA60 | 02/26/04
Yep, I removed unwanted MS Software  Sir_Chancealot | 02/24/04
And I have to admit .......  chawly | 02/25/04
No Registry and System File Protection?  jfrankcarr | 02/24/04
good point...  ryusen | 02/24/04
This is azz-u-me-ing...  DragonBRockin | 02/25/04
i think you miss understand...  ryusen | 02/25/04
Startup Monitor  mds_z | 02/26/04
There is a safe OS in the world if...  mlindl | 02/24/04
Thing is did u read this from there  MikeHerIA60 | 02/26/04
Ahhhh, Another Carrot on a stick... Just keep chasing it.  Plain Logic | 02/24/04
Wow, Gates told the truth  middle of nowhere | 02/24/04
MS brains at work: PC Condoms!  michael-t | 02/24/04
Funny... Asking Zone Labs and McAfee if the Windows Firewall is good  joseb_z | 02/24/04
re: Funny... Asking...  Iain_Peters | 02/25/04
but  ryusen | 02/25/04
MS: small, fast patches are needed first ...  Chris.Papoudaris@... | 02/25/04
Thats a Great Break  ParadigmOdyssey | 02/25/04
Mozilla and Kerio  CobraA1 | 02/25/04
Do they think we're stupid?  TrollSlayer | 02/25/04
Yes, this seems possible  chawly | 02/25/04
block all pop-up ads, none or to ask permission each time  Tammee | 02/25/04
Have you seen...  DragonBRockin | 02/25/04
Is there anything .....  chawly | 02/25/04
It's not about security settings!  bjbrock | 03/19/04

What do you think?

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