On The Insider: Sheen Talks About Car Crash
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Robert Lemos
Posted on ZDNet News: May 5, 2004 7:44:00 PM

Microsoft on Wednesday warned developers at its WinHEC conference that changes continue to be made in the security technology component it plans for next-generation PCs.

Responding to reports that it had decided to scrap plans for a security-focused architecture for Longhorn, its next version of Windows, the software giant stressed that it still aims to get major features into the OS.

"I can't speak to what (the features in) Longhorn will be," Mario Juarez, a product manager for Microsoft's Security Business and Technology Unit, told CNET News.com via phone on Wednesday. "I can tell you that...we are definitely aiming to have these features in the Longhorn time frame." Longhorn is set for release in the first half of 2006.

Working with hardware makers such as IBM and Intel, Microsoft aims to develop next-generation hardware and software that can better protect data from attackers, viruses and digital pirates. The architecture, referred to as trusted PC, generally promises to do four things: secure input from devices such as the keyboard, protect application data from modification, encrypt storage and allow for attestation, which lets organizations that "own" content on a person's computer ascertain whether the data or software has been modified.

A year ago at WinHEC (the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference), Microsoft showed off a security prototype to demonstrate to developers what the secure features might look like in Windows.

But the recent qualifications made by the project team indicate that Microsoft still hasn't solved key design issues for its version of the "trusted PC" security technology, which it calls the next-generation secure computing base, or NG-SCB. For example, the company's software architects still haven't decided on the way in which Microsoft will patch the core of the secure OS or allow for restoring backups to a computer. Both activities change protected data and will run afoul of the protections erected by NG-SCB.

"It is still up in the air, along with the rest of the stuff," Juarez said.

What's not up in the air, he said, is Microsoft's commitment to producing software that, when paired with new computing hardware, can better secure data.

"Exactly how the implementation will work is what we are focused on now," he said.

One consideration is that customers are asking for more features to be available to applications without the need for the expensive rewriting of software, Juarez added.

"What our customers told us is that these features are valuable, but they...(want us) to find a way to offer some of the secure computing experience out of the box," he said.

Critics maintain that the fourth feature of Microsoft's trusted PC plan, remote attestation, could lead to major privacy issues. A paper the Electronic Frontier Foundation released last October applauded three features of Microsoft's scheme but criticized remote attestation as a threat that could lock people into certain applications, force unwanted software changes on them and prevent reverse engineering.

Such considerations could still be taken into account, as the Microsoft system is refined.

"The bottom-line message is that we have taken a lot of feedback from customers--we are making some evolutionary updates to the architecture," Juarez said.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 55 Talkback(s)
All through time people have said
All through time people lhave said that the average person is not qualified to run their own life. That has been the first arguement of Kings, Communists, Dictators and Despots of all sorts. Now the... (Read the rest)
Posted by: don3605 Posted on: 05/07/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Security == Control of your box  Tim Patterson | 05/05/04
Security == Control of your box  Loverock Davidson | 05/05/04
But with linux, I can modify+re-compile the kernel  Knorthern Knight | 05/05/04
Nice try...  swoopee | 05/05/04
Huh?  CobraA1 | 05/06/04
Yup!  Martin Marvinski | 05/05/04
Interesting contradiction...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/05/04
Going Waaaaay Overbaord  Jeff Spicoli | 05/05/04
Please dont take me wrong. I think you need to read more on it...  computer_man | 05/05/04
yep, ibm does same thing  V Sanders | 05/06/04
rotflmao  V Sanders | 05/06/04
90% of users disagree with you  V Sanders | 05/06/04
Not true  Rick_K | 05/06/04
In other words  Chad_z | 05/05/04
Hmm, exactly who is it that owns the data on your box?  oldskool | 05/05/04
Can't argue that oldschool, but...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/05/04
Why is this important?  Jeff Spicoli | 05/05/04
Why it's important  PA-ITGuy | 05/06/04
elected Government vs private company  j.m.galvin | 05/06/04
Oh yeah, like I trust the government....  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
HUH?  j.m.galvin | 05/06/04
Because we all swim in the same water.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
Guffaw!  Cardinal_Bill | 05/05/04
Get real...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
Hold it.  Cardinal_Bill | 05/06/04
NO, I am talking about Joe Average home user.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
That's what default settings should be for  CobraA1 | 05/06/04
is easy  V Sanders | 05/06/04
All through time people have said  don3605 | 05/07/04
Vapourware on the prawl, again!!!  Spin_Masterz | 05/05/04
Keep tinkering, Microsoft  Franklin_z | 05/05/04
Tinkee enough . . . and even Microsoft might get it right ...  Plain Logic | 05/05/04
But, can you protect users from themselve's?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/05/04
One of the few times  Linux User 147560 | 05/05/04
Thanks L.U.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/05/04
True True. AX  Squawkbox | 05/05/04
Protect the system from the user  Richard Flude | 05/05/04
WOrst case of cherry picking I've ever seen.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
Sure but I got the big cherry  Richard Flude | 05/06/04
The quote you're looking for  CobraA1 | 05/06/04
What has yet to be seen.  Rick_K | 05/06/04
Another statement about a vapourware  Richard Flude | 05/05/04
Vaporware??? Seems it's running fine here.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
Yep Vaporware.  Richard Flude | 05/06/04
Hope That Day Never Comes  ParadigmOdyssey | 05/05/04
Always good to be on the bleeding edge.  Cardinal_Bill | 05/05/04
is already happening and consumers like it  V Sanders | 05/06/04
Wrong  Tim Patterson | 05/06/04
Well said  Rick_K | 05/06/04
You and Bit...  Cardinal_Bill | 05/06/04
This is the scary part  Rick_K | 05/06/04
The sky is falling, run for your lives.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/06/04
Lame Bit, just plain lame  Rick_K | 05/07/04
And probably illegal  j.m.galvin | 05/06/04
Microsoft Is More Dangerous than Any Security Threat  brenthawkinsmd | 05/06/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here