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Microsoft Scott Charney:
Progress Toward End to End Trust
March 2, 2010
Microsoft
outlined how the company continues to make progress toward its End to
End Trust vision. In his keynote address, Scott Charney, corporate vice
president of Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing Group, explained how the
company’s vision for End to End Trust applies to cloud computing,
detailed progress toward a claims-based identity metasystem, and called
for public and private organizations alike to prevent and disrupt
cybercrime.
“End to End Trust is our vision for realizing a safer, more trusted
Internet,” said Charney. “To enable trust inside, and outside, of cloud
computing environments will require security and privacy fundamentals,
technology innovations, and social, economic, political and IT
alignment.”
Further, Charney explained that identity solutions that provide more
secure and private access to both on-site and cloud applications are key
to enabling a safer, more trusted enterprise and Internet. As part of
that effort, Microsoft today released a community technology preview of
the U-Prove technology, which enables online providers to better protect
privacy and enhance security through the minimal disclosure of
information in online transactions. To encourage broad community
evaluation and input, Microsoft announced it is providing core portions
of the U-Prove intellectual property under the Open Specification
Promise, as well as releasing open source software development kits in
C# and Java editions. Charney encouraged the industry, developers and IT
professionals to develop identity solutions that help protect individual
privacy.
The company also shared details about a new partnership with the
Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems in Berlin on an
interoperability prototype project integrating U-Prove and the Microsoft
identity platform with the German government’s future use of electronic
identity cards.
As
further evidence of how the company is enabling a safer, more trusted
enterprise, Microsoft also today released Forefront Identity Manager
2010, a part of its Business Ready Security strategy. Forefront Identity
Manager enables policy-based identity management across diverse
environments, empowers business customers with self-service
capabilities, and provides IT professionals with rich administrative
tools.
In addition, Charney reviewed company efforts to creatively disrupt and
prevent cybercrime. Citing Microsoft’s recently announced Operation b49,
a Microsoft-led initiative to neutralize the well-known Waledac botnet,
Charney stated that while focusing on security and privacy fundamentals
and threat mitigation remains necessary, the industry needs to be more
aggressive in blunting the impact of cybercriminals. Operation b49 is an
example of how the private sector can get more creative in its
collective approach to fighting criminals online.
“We are committed to collaborating with industry and governments
worldwide to realize a safer, more trusted Internet through the creative
disruption and prevention of cybercrime,” Charney said. |