Microsoft will be taking a closer look at the security of a new Web publishing technology it plans to integrate into the next
major version of Windows, code-named Longhorn. Microsoft plans to offer ways for developers to use the RSS (Really Simple
Syndication) standard to create Windows applications, but the company first wants to talk about the security implications
of such a move.
Developers should expect to discuss RSS security at Microsoft's upcoming Professional Developers Conference, to be held in
Los Angeles this September, said Robert Scoble, a Microsoft technical evangelist writing in a recent Web log posting. "This
is something we all need to do a lot of thinking and work on," he said.
RSS is now used primarily as a way of letting Web surfers know when new articles have been posted to Web sites, but they must
use special software in order to view and subscribe to RSS feeds. With Longhorn, expected in the second half of 2006, that
capability will be built into the operating system. Microsoft will also provide new developer tools so that developers can
more easily build Windows applications that use the protocol.
Microsoft declined to say what, if any security concerns it has about RSS, but observers say that once it is included in Windows,
RSS will be a much more appealing target to attackers. Jupiter Research estimates that the protocol is used by about six percent
of U.S. consumers, but once it is embedded in Windows that number will jump substantially
As Web browsers and e-mail clients moved into the mainstream, so too did worms and viruses, said Rich Miller, an analyst with
Netcraft Ltd. Some are concerned that the same pattern may emerge with RSS readers, he said. "Once that becomes a technology
that's on everybody's desktop and can be accessed using the Windows operating system, that changes the dynamic quite substantially."
Though there haven't yet been any major security risks associated with RSS, which is generally considered more secure than
many other Web technologies, security may become more of an issue as RSS begins to be used for a wider variety of tasks.
"We have an opportunity to look at ways we could build into RSS some of the security features that we wished had been present
in e-mail," said Phillip Hallam-Baker, principal scientist with VeriSign Inc.
Phishing, for example, could become an problem as new applications are developed for RSS, he said. "At the moment, I don't
see that there is a phishing issue with RSS," he said. "However, if banks start using it to distribute statements, it may
become an issue."
"The more automation that people have built in [to RSS] the more places that you might have somebody work out some dirty trick,"
Hallam-Baker said. "Are we going to make sure we've locked down as many rat holes as we could have done, or are we going to
find that if we'd put better security in there, we'd be happier with the result?" he asked.