Trustworthy Yet? An examination of Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing initiative, and what it means...

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Trustworthy Yet?

An examination of Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing initiative, and what it means to enterprise security

practitioners

Our Panelists

KEN TYMINSKI

CISO Prudential Financial of America

JOSEPH COOPER, CISSP

Chairman & CEO Digital Defense

JONATHAN PERERA

Senior Director of Product Management Microsoft’s Security & Technology Unit

Microsoft’s Beginnings

Gates’ Mandate

“Trustworthy Computing is computing that is as available, reliable and secure as electricity, water services and telephony.”

--Bill Gates, January 17, 2002

Trustworthy Milestones 2002

Retrained 11,000 developers and engineers

Revamped MSRC

Retrofitted XP (SP1) and Win2K (SP4)

Released MBSA

Replaced the complier in Win2003

Released Win2003 with services off by default

Changed philosophy on shipping products

Trustworthy Milestones 2003

Released SQL Server 2000 SP3

Improved Exchange 2003 & Office 2003

Changed vulnerability announcements

Launched ISA 2000 FP1

Released patching tools

Acquired AV company, formed alliance

Trustworthy Ambitions

Windows XP (beta; due summer ’04)

Integrating WUS with Windows, other apps

Active defenses, synergistic strategy

Substantial more secure OSes & apps: Yukon (SQL), 2005; Longhorn (Windows), 2006

=

Trustworthy Ambitions

End goal: 2014 or longer

Microsoft is doing enough to improve its software security.

Strongly Disagree 40%

Somewhat Disagree30%

Strongly Agree 2%

Somewhat Agree 18%

Will Trustworthy Computing eventually make a difference?

0 20 40 60

Don'tKnow

No

Yes

20032002

Redmond’s Assessment

“I think we have made a good start in the last two years, and I believe we will have made enormous progress 10 years from now.”

STEVE BALLMER

CEO, Microsoft

Is Microsoft doing enough to improve the security

of its products?

Is it on the right track?

Patching

Patching Windows Is Best Characterized As:

Unavoidable46%

An Overblown Problem

5%

Onerous 48%

Microsoft Is Doing Enough To Ease The Patching Problem.

Strongly Disagree28%

Somewhat Disagree33%

Strongly Agree 3%

Somewhat Agree 20%

Is the Windows patching problem getting better?

Synergistic Security

“There’s no one thing that’s going to solve this. Mitigation is part of it.”

MIKE NASH

Corporate VP, Microsoft SBU

Will Microsoft’s synergistic security strategy lead to better overall security for

Windows and its other applications?

What does Microsoft need to do to win and retain

the confidence of its enterprise customers?

Users Respond

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