Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Microsoft Rolls Out New Security Initiatives

By Jabulani Leffall07/27/2009

The Black Hat security conference continues this week in Las Vegas and Microsoft is once again rallying its industry allies, and even its competitors, to a common cause.

"There's a race between attackers and defenders and if we want to win, we have to share information," said Mike Reavey, director of the Microsoft Security Response Center in a prepared statement.

Microsoft is picking up where it left off last year and adding to its security initiative. The software giant is calling for widespread collaboration between every software company and channel partner in the ecosystem that stands to be harmed by malware, hackers, and automated and manual perils.


On Monday, Redmond issued a July "progress report" (PDF) on the security initiatives it launched last summer. The company also rolled out new security tools for its own software products, as well as collaborative technical guidance to support security efforts by its customers and partners.

Redmond's latest security initiative is threefold. First, it is issuing a security update guide with which customers can better "manage risk," according to Microsoft. "The Microsoft Security Update Guide" (which can be downloaded here) helps create planning paradigms for patch releases and security updates.

Then, there is the new collaborative initiative that the software giant dubbed "Project Quant." Redmond describes it as an "open community project" with the aim of bringing vendors together to develop patch and update management "cost models" for enterprises. The idea behind Project Quant is that IT departments and their consultants can strategize on how to manage the security workflow, and use templates to save time and money. In Redmond's words, Project Quant provides "common baselines and improves their processes and practices." A description of the update management model for Project Quant can be downloaded here.

The third prong in Microsoft's latest security initiative is its Office Visualization Tool. Redmond says this tool will "allow customers to better understand and deconstruct Microsoft Office-based attacks." The tool may prove helpful, given the proliferation of Excel, Word and PowerPoint vulnerabilities typically unearthed on Patch Tuesdays. The Office Visualization Tool can be downloaded for free here (Zip file).

Microsoft has already planned some new defensive measures to be included with the next version of Office. For its upcoming Office 2010 rollout, Word, Excel and PowerPoint files will be available in a read-only environment that is "sandboxed," or protected, from malicious coding, according to an Office 2010 blog last week.

For the long term, Microsoft is continuing its security development lifecycle and community-based defense strategy. It's also continuing to stress collaboration as a line of defense.

"In the race between exploit and protection, it is clear that collaboration is key to shifting advantage to the security industry and better protecting customers from the ever-changing threat landscape," said George Stathakopoulos, general manager of the Trustworthy Computing Group at Microsoft, in a prepared statement issued on Monday.



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