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Microsoft, under attack, aims to offer security

Redmond giant to shore up the security of IE in the coming weeks

By Scarlet Pruitt, IDG News Service
July 06, 2004
 

Two and a half years after launching its Trustworthy Computing initiative, Microsoft Corp. is finding its products the target of escalating attacks, to the extent that some security experts are even warning that the company's Internet Explorer (IE) browser is simply not safe to use.

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While the company has been trying to take these slings and arrows in its stride, claiming they are an unfortunate side effect of being a market leader and that it's doing all it can to defend itself, users seem to be looking for reassurance that Trustworthy Computing will pay off -- and soon.

"They've launched this Trustworthy Computing campaign and they are still issuing all these patches. They shouldn't make things so complex. When is it going to get better?" asked software developer Michael Kranawetter. He was interviewed on the floor of last week's Tech Ed conference in Amsterdam where some 6,000 software developers and IT professionals gathered to hear the latest in Microsoft development news.

To be fair, Microsoft has been working hard to streamline its patching process, by releasing combined fixes when possible and delivering them on a monthly release schedule, for instance. It is also providing a free patching service and a centralized place for users to find fixes.

Besides improved patching, it is also moving to bolster the security of its desktop software, by turning off potential ports of attack and adding security features such as a firewall enabled by default, to help users protect their PCs.

Many new security improvements are due to be delivered with the much anticipated Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2), an update to the Windows XP operating system (OS), which is so jam-packed with fixes and features that installing it is said to be like a installing a whole new OS.

Microsoft executives have promised to deliver SP2 by "the end of summer" although Microsoft Senior Director of Trustworthy Computing for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) Detlef Eckert said at Tech Ed last week that "summer ends in September this year."

"We have now realized -- to some extent, painfully -- that the security atmosphere has changed which is why we are putting so much effort into Service Pack 2," Eckert said. "Most of these new features would have blocked against recent attacks."

The company learned a great deal from threats like the Sasser Internet worm, he added, which wreaked havoc earlier this year by exploiting a disclosed hole in a component in Windows.

"We know we need to move ahead of the attack cycle and mitigate against specific attacks against applications," he said.

But while the company has been working to address users' security woes, it continues to come under attack from virus writers who clearly have a few tricks up their sleeves.

One of the latest attacks used Web sites running Internet Information Server (IIS) to launch malicious computer code, and prompted the company to release updates to its Windows 2000, XP and Windows Server 2003 software last week to help users fend off the attacks.

The Redmond, Washington, company also said last week that it is planning to release a number of updates in coming weeks to shore up the security of IE.

The company's IE browser seems to have become target number one for virus writers. In one of the latest attacks against it hackers took advantage of a browser extension functionality to steal log-in information from banking sites.

Numerous vulnerabilities in IE, which holds over 95 percent of the browser market, have even prompted some security experts to warn against using the product all together, suggesting that users switch to options such as Opera, Netscape, or Mozilla.

"It's safe to say that IE is not safe to use," said Mikko Hyppönen, director of antivirus research at Helsinki antivirus company F-Secure Corp. "I don't use it and I know of companies that have banned it all together," he said Monday.

The U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team, or US-CERT, also recently suggested that users reduce exposure to IE vulnerabilities by using a different browser.

Hyppönen warns, however, that for many companies simply allowing users to switch to another browser is not the answer.

"There are two nightmares a systems administrator can have," he said. "One is having security vulnerabilities and the other is having to support users who are all using different applications." Furthermore, many Net applications are tied to IE, so switching may not be a practical option for some.

But while not all software users are free to change platforms when threat levels gets high, some can. Microsoft doesn't seem too concerned about a mass exodus from its products, however, saying that if enough people moved to another brand of browser, for example, it would also come under attack.

"Other browsers have problems too. IE has just been widely used in attacks because it's number one," Eckert said.

Bernardete de Godoy, a developer with Munich Reinsurance Company who also attended Tech Ed in Amsterdam last week, showed some understanding for Microsoft's position.

"It's not necessarily their fault. It's not so easy to make things secure," she said.

With future attacks against Microsoft seemingly imminent, it looks as though many who rely on the company's technology may have to take recent security progress such as advances in SP2 and quickly-released patches for new vulnerabilities as a sign that Trustworthy Computing is paying off. Besides, experts point out that if anyone has a vested interest in keeping users safe and happy with Microsoft products, it's Microsoft.

"They are not fighting a losing battle," Hyppönen said, "And I like the fact that they are fighting it."

 





 

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